Britl.th harbor in Ai wide world' biketne a safe 1 port for Thitish - slaitif;; ; lititatied. 'by. British sailors and armed - with Brititeti :Tunic to prey_ an our pose3nd' commerce; even en, our :ships- coming. from Britiedi ports, freighte4C-with,British - pro- duct 4, or thatimad-mwded gifts (elitist - it to. the.. Enztish• poor. The Prime Minister in the Howe of -OstimottOttistained.by cheees; sooffedat , the thou ;ht that their laws could be : amended &Veer 3ell*Pqtitli %tconreVe revskteuttAo4 and* re4touttlaineso•StOw. owned to - their. setsretatranswered that, Idig3wootedd. tint chatage their laissaidinftnitlutu*. - t3-3 ..-: - 4 . . • .-liteliarasirssi-iwitk England.: • tsThe people et. ..townies them wished, as they al ways have wished, as they still wish, friendly re lations withEngiand ; and no amain England'or America cad desire it more :Strongly than I,— This coiantry • has always yearned for good rela tions with England. - beei tmly in all ittihistor ry has that yearning fairly the deli( of .Hatittlen- and„-Croistwell;-..sgein -in the first ministry of the elder Pitt., and once; again, in the 'tainisty , of Shelburne; Not that - Ahern have not atalitimes been-past men aziong. the • peers of Britain, like-Eats-a irt.,the dwrs of James . It; or a - Granville, an Argyll, Or a Itookidon n arse. - and we ,cannot4w,tralifereratta4 4oll o ll A st. pre - 3114E4f statesmen like 6ohden =sad Bright ;Mit . the best bower anchor of peace was the working- Masa of England, who suffered moet from our civil war, bat. who, while they broke their diminished breadin sorrow, always encouraged smirk peree Fiiiiree'sutthe atlenewe'petcarlwe.. The .'act of reeognizing the:Rebel belligerent's Was concerted with France' France, so-beloved in America, on which she Backonferied the'greate est. benefits , that one peop eVer Conferred on en- , other; France,: Which 'stands foremost- eir.the continent of .Ettr.ope for' the ifolidity.'of her. cut-. • t are,- - as well 0$ for .the liraYery andgenerons pillest of . her tonal: France, which for :centuries had been moving steadily- its owl toward intellectual' and political freedom:. -The policy. 'regarding further colonizatiodof America by Eu ropcan •powers,.known commonly as the 'doctrine of slonroe, had" its • origin in 'Prance ;' and if it . takes. any man's name, should hearth° name-of. -Turgot. -•It was adopted by; Louis the.Sixteentli,. in, the cabinet of whioh•Vergentee was the istoat. important -member...' It is 6inpliatically the' poli- cy of France,-to which, with. transient deviations. the :Bourbons, the First 'Napoltf;the House - of . Oriems, nave. ever adhered.... • '. • • • • • • :The Emperiii Napo!eon and Ptlyalei. • • The: late „Pregident wasilexpetna lly• harassed-by . minors that flit, Emperor Napoleon the Third de sired formally to ree4ig,nizethe'Statesin rebellion as an - independent power,. arid: that England held him 'back by her reluctauce,.or France: by her itraditiotis of freedom, or he himself byhis own, better judgment and. clear perception of :events. But the Republic of Heil's", on our bor,lers, was; like ourselves, distracted by a rebellion', and from - a sitadar.eause: The monarchy of England" had fastened npoWns Slavery, which did not dieap pearwithindepernlence ; in like manner, the ec clesiaatical policy' established 'by the . ,Spanish- Claimed Of theludies, in the days of Charles the • • Fifth ; and. Philip the Second, retaitied Vigite the Ifeiican Republic:' The 50 'years of civil War under 'which she diadlanguislied,'.was due to the. bigoted system Whichwas the legacy of mop a rehy; just ae here the inheritance of. Slavery kept -alive political strife,.ancr cult:ablated: in civil war. As with-us there' could be le . ) more quiet hut through. the .end of- Slavery, so in 51ezieu.there could be rio•prosperitv until the crushing tyrappy of.intol - - prance should cease: The party of Slavery n the -United Stated sent their _emissaries to Europe; to Solicit aid ; and so did the-party of the Churehin • Mexico, as organized by the old _Spaniel' Council ' of the Indies; hut with a different result.' Just as the Republican-party had nnide an-end:of the hellion; and Was establishing' the beet government -even known-in that region,. and gising promise to file nation 'of - order, 'peace and prosperity; word • was.brought us,-in -a moulent of our deepest diction; that the French • Emperor, moved by a 'desire -tri erect in North. America a' btittress for iniperialism;• would transform ;the 'republic Mexico into a •secundo-genittire for the house of . Hapsburg.- Anicrica. might complain ; she could • nut then interpose, and .deley'seerned It was seen that Wilco could not, •witli all its wealth of land, compete, in cereal' products with ' our North-\leet ; nor. is tropical products;'with Cuba; nor. could it;. under a 'disputed-dynasty; attract capital, or - create public works, or develop mines.; or. borrow - Money ' - .ea that the imperial system of 'Merieo, which was:forced at once to recognize the wisdom of the 'policy 'of the republic .• in adopting it, could..prove only an: unreinunera tine-debt On the French treasury, for the 'etippoit .of.an Austrain adveriturer,..: -. . • . • _ The rerpreiaity Meanwhile, a - of momentous goes . tions no; and forces' .theinselves on .thet . .61usitletatiiiti'pf the theuglitful.• Republicanism ..has learned how to introduce into its Cutistittition 'every element, ofPorder; de, well as. every element of freedorn- . ' .hut thus far the continuity Of. its trifht has seemed - to de v end On itsolitimi i (It elections. Wig ,now to be considered: how • perpetuity into be secured agiubst .The . sticeekair -of Charles. tho':First of England dated his reign from .the 'death of his .father: the Bourbons, coming. back after a long series Of revOlutions, claimed that. the.Louia who became - King wastheeiglifeenth, Of that: . The preseut-Buiperor of thikFreneh,.ilisdaininga - title from election.alone, is"Calied the. third of his name. Sliall.a republic have - lees pOwer .con tinuaned Whet/ invading armies . nievent a peace ful resort to the ballot-boa? What force shall it attaelt.to - int:rvening.legis:stio.o ? 'What validity to dcbt& - contracted • for its overthrow? Thtl6 '.momentous questions are by the invasion of-Mex ico thrown up . for SolutiOn.. A free. State once .truly' constituted, should .be as. undying as-.its people;' the Bepublie of Mexico toast rise. again. The Polite et Bente and the Betielliou. '-It was 'the - condition of atfaitS iii Mtltico . that' Involved the Pope of Rome, in oar difficulties' so far 'that lie alone among . temporal' ;sovereigns rixiigilizkr the . chiera. the .Confederate States as .a Presi lent, and his supporters "as' a people; and in letters to.two great . nrelateS of the Cath olic Church iii the United States, give.counsels •. for peace at a time when peat? 2, Meant the victory. of sata,46ll. - yo . events move sa they' are .(ir dexcid. The blesSing•of the Pope at ltotne eir the head-of Dhke. aximilian the not. - -revive nineteenth century, 'the.eceleSiastical policy •Of the .sixteenth and the result -ie 'only anew proof that there 6.1 . 1 been prosperity in tie state with - ;out religious, freedom. ~. • . . : • . • The Peeptettf America. VTlien it cane home Valle comiciousnees of the Americans that die war they were waging .waw.a. War for the libertY of all the nations in the world, for fret.-40m itself,' they thanked - God. for the .se verity Of.the trial to M Ileit their sincerity, and nerved .them , 4lves for their duty with , an h ci ,..zortible will.- The • Preitident , was led ;acing by the .g,reatiiesies of their self-aaeriliehig. exarmile; as a elfild,-iti`a dart higlitari a rugged . u•ay,.. catelies hold Of, the hand. of ire father for glint-% ante and supp• Wt. he clung fast to the hand of the. T eople; and moved calmly throligh the gloom.— While the statesmanship of Europe. was.' * 6164; at the hop:less vanity of their etibris, they put forth melt miracles of energy' as. the bietpry of the'world had. never . of the .liiiiced States, drawing-into the piddle servicO the willing militia of the seas, doubled its.'-totinag, In tight months, and established an actual Week ride frith' 'Cap(' I - fattens . to the Rio :dra In : the ecturite ofthe war, it :way in e rt aserl 'fivt—fl,l - Men.awl hi tonnage, while themiventiv gen iu of the country cleviied more effeetieedinois onl nanee, and he. te'formS of naval iteetu ihavood 'awl iron.. There wout..ititicthe field, for i•.trioris t , rins. of. service,. about '2,0,10,000.: men.; and • Itlsrch last the•nien in'scrywe exceeded :i',inillioi t that is to say, - wie'of every twit able-bodied 1/161i; took some part in the war.; 'ariclat 'olo time every fourth able-bodied man was in the 'field:: Inane . single IMMO, •165,006 Men were' -recruited into . service. • Once, within four weeka'Qhio organized • and placed in tlie•tield'4.2 weginient„-i Of i:.;fartry --nearly 36,00 .0 men ; anti : Ili) Wil.S.; like otter. States iwthe East 'and lii the Tee 'well. mounted cavalry: numbered . . 84,006';, .of horses • there were bought first anti last two-thirds • of 'a million. In thin, moVements of troops science. came, iii aid of patriotism ; so that, to chhOse single installed out of 'many,. an army. - 23;0011 . strong With its artillery, trainS, bagage, and, animals, were movedby, rail f rom the'Potoman to the Tetinessee, 1,200' miles, in,: seven - . days In: ilia long marches, wonders of railitaryconstructinn 'bridged the rivers.;',, and whenever an army halt ample. Supplies.awaited them at their .ever- charigiugibase. The vile:thought that life hi the, . 'greatest at blessings dud hot rise tip.. In 625 bat; tleS and severe'skirmishes blood flowettlike wa - tor. It streamed over, the grassy plains.; it stain ed the . rocks ;Ithe 'undergrowth . of the forests was red with it ; and armies marched on with ma- . • jeStie ;mirage. from one: conflict to' another, know jog that - they. were fighting for God and liberty. • -The'orgtinization of-the medical.departmcnt met 'its infinitely mutiplied'ilhties,. with exactness and dispatch. the news of a battle the heat.' stir:. - . .goons :of our 'Mtn% hastened to the field to .offer .the 'zealous: aid cif the greatest experiewie .:skill, ',rho 'gentlest and ;nos; refined 'of .wOrneti deft homee of luXiiry and ease to build _] tr apical tents near the armies; 'and serve SS' Mimes to the sick, and dying:: • Beside the largosopply of. relig ions teachers. by the public, - .tha':cougregations spared. to their brothers ..in thetield the...ablest ministers. The.: Christian • cominission, . 'which • 'expended £4,500,006,' sent 4,000' clergYmen, ehoSeh. • out of the best; to• keep uheolled' the-re-' ligious . character of the men,' and made gifts .of .clothes and food.. arid .medicino:' The organiza.-• Von pf priyate : charity assumed it:Mean:l,of di. menaions.• The Sanitary CotuntissiMi; Which had 7,000 .Societies; distributed, under the of' an napiid-board, spluitatieous contributions to, the amount of 415.000.*0 in supplies - or meneY—;: 51x0,900 'in Money from. California'-.alone—and dotted' the scenet.iif .War train Paducah. to Port Bnyal, from Belle Plain, Virginia, to Idiewnsville, :Texas, with homes and lodges .' • .: ••• • • ' • The Emanciprohiev Peeelhientation. 'The country had-fer its allies the .ther eippi,whieh Could - not be . divided,' aria the range . of-mouptnins which cairried • the stronghold of;the.. free. through-Western 'Virginia. an a Keti lucky and • Terineasse to the highlands . of..A.laliania.- •:-.Rut, it invoked the still higher- power of immortal Pia-, , In ancient Elreedei - where serviiiideWas the universal enstorn; it Was held•diat if a child . • .to strike its- parent, the 'slave 'should defend the parent, and by . that act recover -his freedom..-=-• •. :After pain resistance, Lincolw Who- hail tried to . , .. -solve the question- by gradual emancipation;-hy Aeolonizatiou, and by compensation, at last .s"..w. - that .Slavery inuldhe abolishel;or the Republic . :Must die, intl-on - the first .day.-tif January. mildi • be wrote liberty oti. the banners-of When this proclamation, 'which struck the fetters - from 3,000,000 'of slaves ' reached Erirope, Lird: Ihissell.-a•countryinan of liltbn and Wilberforce; - eagerly'-put himself forward to speak-of it id-The mine of mankind, saying ; "It is of a veiyat range: nature •'! "a measure of War of •a very cmeatimia-" • :hie kinal;". an set- "of vengeance - on- the alive . owner" that does no'rnorethan "profess,tcetnau •• cipa.te slave's where- the United-Statesautliorities cannot: make: emancipation . a.' reality:" • New; .-there.was.no part of the corintr*.embratted proclamation where the United •Stateseonld.not • •••• and did not Make einancipatiniCa reality, Those: *saw Liecoln, most frequently; had never' be - • :• - Lori heard bitterness.of . ,man being, - bat botlid not .conee4l how.kiianly he felt; that he. Wail. ken • wronged by "Ixiid Russell. • And he wrote, in reply to •auotlitir caviller: "The i crea help Mien piney. and the use of. colored troops were the greatest blows yet 'dealt-tO the Rebel- - . • The job Wait great. national one, and let .' :none lieslighted Whebo . re.an honorable part in it. •I hope peace-will, dome audl•come to stay .. ; tlwn w ill there be some lack men . who C41:1 • re member that they . hive 'helped mankind to this -greet-:consitinMatto.t?„- 7 %•..• : • . .• • • • ••••.-... •.'.; • • : • : , • • - - -The- :Proclamation -scogimpliali ed its eiid for, dining • the warour -tirteies'eame an any • , • possession . ei'gry iii-"zebelliori. .....- • 00 - - vrieo;Tle4l fbrtli . from 'the elteriltinetittediffnsicrn or .tiftht and feeling. among'.tWi:latitins.-14 mankind.• The mysterious gympatilybt.the eidaionsitirbughout the .corn was giMie 3 spont4awntsly. ' The beet writers of Europe .ilvaked tlit- - ;-tonscienee. of the thotightftil,:till thelnteilige inoral sentinititile. the Old World witantwn `` the sideof:/be nu• lettered' ritatesmial the Iriet: 13inssiii whose i Empero i Oliest;iertomplyribid oueof thegrand est acts atikorttge_of. by ra.ispgf2o,oo% WO .of ndme admennto -fre a4 oders, ind thus: air miring the growth and culture of a Miamian' peo ple, remained our. tinwaverperlendo,Progr , Urn oldest abode Of ciiilizatioir, widettifive the lb* example of an iniperiat .Rowernsinlotirdthlkirtalii ty auvogg_thsw) li_..le Prince Knag, the Secre tary .of Safe , tor -PereqtrAffilis' 1,--reineniliered. the' saying of ' Ginfacitte 'that we abdidd,got,, do., to".others what we would not that others aborill do to tie, and. in' the name' of the the: Emperor. of phitia closed its ports 4ioiiist tke wa; ali,ips..,iuitd privateers of. "tire se: thong" _.t _.:. . •r; -Cdaaiiiissusee tie. War:— . The war continued,,with.till the peoples of the world for anxious spectators.' Its . cares weighed hearilyselpicoln; and his face was , plowed with thhfurrows of thought and eath*s....)Vith mat towsnimirie,-,,fres froptl,alia-eptrit.of reVerige,, • victory Made • 'him iMportntaterlar. peace;` and. his "enemies never doubted, his Word, or despaired' of bid , kboundiag clemeoty. • He. lunged - tu Atter pardonas the word for all:but , trt , unless the freedom -.Of the ilegro-shOuld- beassured. • The grand battles ef Mill Spring;Whitih givens Nash-I villa,. of - . Fort:Dim/loon Ma:lveralTill, Antietam, Gettvabrirg. the Wilderimds of Nirghlitt, ter, Nashville, the-captams of New. Orleans, Vicks- j Mobile, Fort.Fisher,the : areh , from-At lanta; anti the capture of Savannah and- . Charles... l .fireteld the *Tie. Still More; the self- i regeneration of Missouri, the heart of the cOnti-, bent i.orlitityland; whose dons never heard the, Midmght bells - . chime: so sweetly as when: they rang out to earth arid -heaven:. that ; the voicel of ber own people; shetook lief place among - _ the free ;Tennessee, which.- paseed :through .fire and blood; through, Borrows and - the 'shadow of death .to work' out her yam deliverance, - iina•by the .. faithfulness -of her. own-sons to renew her -youth like the eagle. : '-proved that victory-was served; and would be' worth all . that, it. cost,: 'lf -words of mercy, uttered ad they. werehy Lincoln on the watera of were deftantlyvepelled, the armies of the - country,' with one will, -went,*as tkei arrow to Its -mark, ancl • without a feeling of 'revenge, struck s di:soh-blow at 'rebel,. liott . . . ~ . . . . ItAbsteoluls'Aissuildissittiou.' • . .Where in the history : of 4tatiatisi had. tvehief Magistrate in . 'morn sources Or cObsolation and ijoy .than Lincoln?' His countryumn - liid shown their Iffie tb..a second term. ass : mice: The.rar.;:ing war that, hid 'divided the .country.. had ; and . private' - grief was hushed by the griiideurof: its.results. - The na; - flea had its, new birth of,:freeduni, :soon t0..b0 se cured'forever.liy rill, intendment.of •tile Cinistitti , thin . .. His • peril-tent gentlen . etis_,llia.. ' cot:qqewc:l for binir a hid] oit.the.Part of the Smth: His in..offers Itoinnit the grandees, of E.U.ripebegan to himlinnor.: ThelaboringclassCs.every where saw in his advancement thew. own; All people sent hint their benediction& • And: at themoment of the hight of his fame, to which,his huniility 'and modesty added i h rms,. hn fell by the hand of ' the assassin:;and the' onlytrininpli:aiarded .him was the.march,.tri.the •- . • •Tbe Grearsieis of Mau:. . . no-time to say : tbat hriman glory is..bnt dust andashes,- that:. we Mortals areno More:than eliadowe in pursuit of shallows,.. Hew • meari.ll. Alfirig'were man; if. there Were: not that - within hint which is higher, thanhimself-Lif he could not master., the •illusione of. senile, • and :discern the connections .eYents liy. a.supetior light which • comes.from God. .so shares the'divine poises that, he has power to enhjeCt . interested .passions, to !eve of country,. andpemon al ambition. to'lhe .ennublement of man. Not:hi:Vain - hits Lin-• cOln.lived, for-h.e:has helped•tomake,this - Repub lic an exani . ple . .bl justice, with .no caste but the caste of humanity,' The lteroeS who led 'and ships in battle — Lyon; Merhertion, ft,:yholcrs: Sedgwick, - Wadsworth,•,FOMO', -Waxd,, with 'their cOmpeeisand fell in' the . service,: did not- die in , vain.. they and the Myriads Of na . meless Martyrs, andlie,.. the chief ' roartVr . , . died willing, ' , that Geverinnent of the people, by AIM people, andfor the people, shall hot perish.fioiri tbe.earth.." .• The Joit Died:for the Unjust; The assassination of Liocuau,.who w as so free frern malice, has by'Some - mysterious influence,. -struck the country with solemn awe; and bushed. :instead of exciting 416- passion for: revenge. It,. se9ms'ag• if :the just had died . for. the - .unjust.- -When Ifilink, of, the. friends ,I hive 'l, - At in this. every one who he,n - s - Me..has, like in- self, lost-Atom: wlMm-lio.-moSt hived—ilAre.. is no' consolation to he' derived from victims on the ki calf , from anything htt::.• the "established noktrof theregenerated - nation.- • •• , • Characier. of .11,incollo• . „ . character • Line , lta' . •was • through and through tMAinerieaM . -He the 'first native of. the.ri!gion.viest . of the AileghenieS to attain.; to the highest statiOnt ani.how.happy itisHiat r the man. _who•-was 'brought` forivnra as. the natunl- Mitgiiwth-Mid.first .fruits .of that . .region should Lave been nf..imbleinished purity in private life, .a•g-ood son, a kind husband, a meet affectionate . father:cantina's, itiamso gentle to' all. 'AS. to in tegrity, Douglas, his riVal, sivid.of hitn,'.`JAncoln l is-the ionestestman I..ever knew." • '.•The balaitsmf.hts mind were thoSe*of• Medita.. tion „andluward thought, rather thairof action: He excelled iti-logiCal'statement,mcire than ex-. eeutive•abilikY. He'reasoned cleatly; his-reflect; ire judgnient was good, • and his' ptirPlse were -fixed.; . but, like the Hamlet; of his only poet, his will W. 1.8 tardy, in.actioir; Mid:for thiS reason, and not; frlon humility. - of tenderness ,of 'fee big. ..he Stimetinies'tleplurell that.the fluty whichdev,dved on . hint Wad nut fallen to the lot of : another, ;El,: .was Skillful •in • analysis ; dis:mined.'with _ peed ciaioit the Celaral fdea,bil which a guest ion turned end knew hair disengage Hand-pri,sent it' by itself ijk:II4,E,W.II , 3MPIry. strongold•Etiglish words that wlinldho delighted to express hismpitiions by spuliegm,Alltistrate theta by a parableoir drive them home by. a: story, • . • • Linculit gained amanzil by distinssing queStions Which of allfothersniost..eaSilylead - to fa tt,it leisfil;• hitt he 'Was fieVer: . carried. away .by enthusiastic zeal,: never indulged in .extrairagant . language never•hurried to support. o,treinerneasuresoiever allowed hitoself..'M be Controlled *by Sudden pulses: ..D...riug -the .progress•Of the. election:at -which lie.was cfnisen.l s ,resident; he, expressed nu oilittioitt hat went beyond .the 'Jefferson proviso of - 1.784. - Like.Jeffurson and Lafayette; bad. faith in the itiatitntions of, the tienple - ,:ltud. read those institutions 'with. rare • sagacity:. He knew Any, to bide his time, and Was lfit , li . aS iu advance of public Opinion than to lag behind- - He never §unglit, -to electrify the public by taking . itii_sal-' vaticed- position yvith a' banner' of but 'rattier t (idled to . move. r,,-ew.u:d 1y,.. pitting no dctaelion ., tit - in' front mr...rear, so that the course Of his adinir k istf r ation Utig;it. have been explained as the calindating p diey of ti.srewd. and watchful politician, Miti there•tnit been e‘..err:be,- hind it's tixt , dneee - of principle which fruiti the I -first determined. his .purpnae and grew More hi tensc.with every sear, Toostiming - his life by. its • energy:- reflos iii7re % tint amite,The had''tto vividness of intgitnition. to.picture: . t;‘ , llis mind the horrOrs. of the • ba.tt le-tie:d, nr the in; uspitals . ; his . .r.nsviehee waS'tnoieietttler th.iii • • %ya k -, owr of the rii.kt unass..t.oing .of ttn:n. .11. tone of , ;ti• lit I . .t.. 'Viii ProVidehce Of te:r. fit,frA. % • .!a; • -,- tentaiii.or ;', . he - lieeanw, b, was the. r led' than Elated; and duct and inlinj?l'S : Bilow.ea MOre; than ever hi s 10i0f, that all mehi. are.borli : eqUitt. Ho was no. respecter of. persnm' and neither rank,..nor.-rep utationoveraWed • hien.. In judging of eliarai , ter he failed in discrimination, and,bis appoltitrhents . were sometimes had ; . but lie reti.Oily deferred -to •public-opininmand 'in appointing the, head of .the armies ho folloWed. the manifest preference- Of A. go.id President will secure ':unity to his ad wilnistratibb. by. his oWn supervision of the Nati: : one "departments: Lincoln, who ici. , iepted readily, was Bever-governed by any member of his Cabinet; and . could 'not be moved ftrimil par— pose deltherately.forined ; but It enpervision of affaira was - unsteady and • incomplete, and sonie tinies, by s'.audden . interference transcending the uSual forms,-,ho•rtitlier • confLlsa adVaneed the public business'. If he ever failed in the gem .pulone regard dne the relatiVe rights of Con -gre3s,- it was so evidently withont tick& that no 'conflict could ensue, or evil 'precedent - be estab-.1 dished:. Truth he:won:id .receave 'frOni "any ono; but when inipiesa - sed 'lVothers; be did 'Mit . use their-minions till by reflection he.-had made them th4oughly his own. - • • . It , WAS • the. nature' of Lincoln '.to' - forgiye: , ;-L When' huStilities -ceased,. he . - always *sent....fortir . the flag with .. eVcry one of its stars in'tlte 'lidld, Was, eager to;. receive's hack his re-; turning: countrymen, and meditated "some.-new aunoutteemetit' to- the - South." : :The amend- ment to the Constitution aholishitig-,shagery - -had, -his most: earnest and unwearied support. During. the . rage b we get a Oiialise into his -wild from. bis priVatelystiggnsting.toindisialta that "in defining'" the . franchise soreebt the; colored people,tnigli •be let inP saying "They' would probably help, iti.n.me trying:Anne - to come, to keep the jewel of liberty la the family of free drta.” ^ Iu 1857 hit rivinved :himself • "not in. favor 'Of 7 . what . be improperly stilled "negro :citizen- - ship ;"„for the.Cotist nation disieriminatesbetween eiti.3ene.stid elector.:. Three- days . ..bell:re death' he ideelai-ed his - preference that "th • eleet ivelranchise Were now Conferred on tile very in-, of - the - entered men and on the Seat Ihein - -who served our cantiOassoldiera;''l buthe witined . it . done• by; the States therriselVcs, and lie - never, harbored the - thought of. etactim , ' it frOni a new government the condition. f-its reeognitiou.: • . • The last day of hi 4 life beamed'lwith.sunshine, as he sent by the Speedier of thisllouselLS friend-. FY greeting to the men of the. Iticky. Hinuitains and the Pacific Slope; as he contemplated -the re turn of hundreds ot thOnsands'of'soldiets to fruit ful industry; as he 'welcomed in advance inni 7 , dread of.thousands,of emigrants, from Edrope . is his eye kindled with ontlinsiaSi ,- n. at coming m' the nation.,And an, Witlith se thoughts for his country, "ho ivas retnoVed.froM. the toilA and temPtationtrof bin life and was at.peatie.. ' - Paltasersiosi and Linceilzi. • - . . . Hardlyliefthe late Preaident been consigned. to thegrave,' when the Mime Minister of England died, fairer years. and honors.... Palmerston :traced -his liniage to the time of the Conqueror ; Lincoln.' went back - only-to his grandfather.-- Paineerstort:roceived his education from' the beef ' scholars of Harrow; Edinburgh:and. Cambridge:; Lincoln's early . teachers wererthe . silent. 'forest, the prairie, the riva awl the. stars. - Palmerston was.An'public.life for slity years,; Lincoln for but a teutli - of that time. Palmerston was a skillful guide of tui.,eatablislied aristocracy ; Litman; - leader or rather a cotapanion. of the pe o7lo ---: .Palmerston was.exclusively, an Englishman, and made his boast An the House of. Commons that .• . the inter...lit of' England Waihis'shibboleth coin thought . always of mankind as well ashir own country, atuleenred human nature. itself.-4- Palmenitor s froth his narrowneas as an English. man; did but endear hie country to. anyeue corm or , to any one.pemphybeit rather caused uncaei nese and di, libc; Lincoln' left America .more be; loved piety ever..by. all the 'people of . Palinersten was self-posses : sod and adroit. an re conciling, the conflicting' claims of thefactio.ns of the aristocracy; Lincoln, frank and' ingenious, knew how :to pulse himself on the conflicting opinions of the people. • Paltnerstrin was 'capable of insolence toward the weak, .quick.to . the senile of honor, not heedful of. right ;-Lineoln rejected. conniellii . ;en only; es a matter of policy, and was incapable' of..being:wilfully `unjust: • „Palmer sten, essentially superficial t , delighted'itabante.r; and knew how to.diy.ert. grave opWtsition byplay : -fell hivitY;..Linoolii:araa a ier naof inPnito.jest on '.his lips, with aadde'st - elutestriees at his heart.— ' ...P4nereton was a fait; fepresentattne of , the aria; tocratia tib riity,ofth4 . ditV, cheering:for hitvtri , bona,. aot t uot;acicnre.of humanity, but the - " tongs of "Onarum: Litidoin tookta—b,eart tins • 'erns' truttpuf liberty,. obeyed the a as thereof:ll,l-.1 "rands of ProvidenoN and laseepted :the ISFUraftli ' tugs thekftlee of his Veiny. l'almertitiin did' oath* that will endure ;.tilegnslitSchletrignenk ili ;'se' - separs: i Of BelgiuTeetritat litAk.*lntlft. - nm L ivis ere Anil gravi Ao *ice; jacoist. , mashed. . ork. which iimevesnisti;Overr" ' . tr ci*. ; ,- P nfistorC'is a shining,itStiumplif the. 4 ,.. *Aid. a •4011tivated.racy ; tin will showitt ' felgenuifin Teats, of inlitutions - where the. la-. -cring man shares and -asides to-frinn,the . great • fr.h . sassotsf dessigns, of hiewrongtry...- Ppmenston .. Wie.luMieSi i*WeilmbnitterAbiley by the nitier..iff &....ta•Qatien;kandfiillawerlatolithe British srbDOcral, ~ y to-his grave, which after a few years Williford= " iliffioll 'crerbfitteaTatiaf tifeWavisilif:Fortinfl -.1. lutthsin.liainculst was followed lay.the sorp:),w,of. 1 e - *drediantO'iuwinsits Hie ecratinitit .to' IN 'resting' i ..-. lace in the heart of Mississippi Valley, to ':le,re.membered tbroughulktirop . ,,by,,his ccitintry , . Ir-ia,!tuttf.le.4l/ V15"....Pe0* 51 4. th e crPrili 4 " 1 , ! 1 . . 1' :' i `i , eilieliiiiioia C 1: - .- : - ...1 .. . As the sum of, all, the houd of jAhooln, raised be flag ; the American people . was the hero of is war;' and therefore the result is a "new ertsaf • . tepublicanism.' The disturbances in ttiebountrY 4 „441W.110t4Ut.4.7.114At1ing. gi1eP 1 44,444 1at. .94 - n t I . !every, which is a part of , the - system el hereto •.rry . wrong ; 'and.the expulsion i..f this domestic . .uomaly opens to the reuuested nation,a career ' f•riritbought-of dignity and . glory. Henceforth • nr. country had a moralunity as.the lender - free . • .bor. - Tire _party for ' .51averf • and tire. party, . - gaituft Slavery are no more, and are merged iu ne party of union_ and freedom. The. States ihicli would have left as are not brought • back: '..a compered • State-1 - . 1; for then:we s hould hold . 1e131.. only •- so long as that 'con nest •could be :.. taintiined_;. they come br their rightful place .nder the Oonstitution as , original; necessary and Isepa.rablif members Of the State. : • • . . • " We-build monuments to the dead, .but no mon ' orients of *tory... We. respect • the 'example of • ne.ltumane,..whe never, even in 'conquered lauds, -• aised emblemsof.trituuph.` And our . Generals' are • not to he classed in ttie herd of vulgar con cinerorsi, bat are of the school of Timideon 'sod William of Orange and Wa-hington. . They have used the 'sword only to give peace' to , their country= and restate her to her place in the great assembly of the nations.- Our meeting chisel in - hope, now that a People begitisto live 'according to the Uwe of -reason, and republicanism •is intrenched in" a Receititiww of the' Oration. . I -The'orsti:m."was frequently interrupted - by are-. clause, - especially in - these...parte - . which- he em-: plik,.aized;.audin which,. while . s i yeking of Groat' he . said : Let a .bill a ..of - reform remove' the' worn-Out geernment of. class 'and- infuse new.lifeinto the British. Constitution bYaotifiding... .riglit ctiwerti to the People ;- - ; anil cannot .be 'indifferent-to :country: that productki Statesmen. like Cobden and Brigtit.•' - ::-But the best-bower • ehorof peaceemas the .Working class of England,--• who antlered alga :from the- civil War,. but who, while . their . tlitainiShed. bread in ::sor 'row, alw‘t,v.s:enceuraged us to -perievere." The orator's contrast. of -.Palmerston -with' Lincoln— . 'IIIC- fermer, after :a feW pears,-hardly to - tie-A-4 by the side :of the. grave: of Ftix. and Chit— thatn-;•-but the hitter. to . be-- remembered through : all time-by hie eountrypien all: the peoples of-the irtirld"—wits received withManifeetations of tlelight, Sir. Frederick Bruce being-; an . atten- , tiVelitittmer. :But the . aPplasee.waSmore extend id: and :emphatic - when Mr:. Bancroft exclaimed, '.''The Republic' of Meahm - must...rise -again I" Those-parts of the address referri*tothe ciliation Proclamation And fdte titterences of Pte-. silent Linceln iii. that - connection infiver.of free dom,. were received, with earnest reeponseeliy the vast al:tenthly Wait' It 3 chtile'referring te the . mosweridrig . ..friendshipi :of: Russia and the •act of. China, closing:ler - ports againet. the war Ships- Mid privateers of the. Seditious. Mr. *eel:el, the - 'Russian Minister, - wati -- eyidently pleased by- the Compliment to.hia ovin- Government.- Tlie Other . foreign minister preseried an appearance of stern gravity::- The allusion to Mt. Lincoln's wish:only . three da2,,'s - before - his death that th& - .elective franchise Were conferreden the Very lotelligetit 'of the colored - Men; 'and -thtise .pi them-Who. served our-einse . as soldiers ;* but that this.shotild.. Ue dung by the Btates. themselves, and • that he: never- liarboredthe thOughtof exacting it from a new ge . certnnetit as a Condition of its recogniiitio,"_ ivay gt cettql - • - with, Apollo:feel as was also the re-' -mark that in: appointing the head of the Armies; be. followed-the manifest preference of Congress. 'Matiy. eyes - were ...at this'_point, directed - toward . • Ott the'eon'eltision Of- the oration,' which occu pied rivire than . two hours -and a half --in the.-de-: iiiery,thereSwas'a.. spOntanethis oittbnret ' of ; tip-; . ". .clapping of •liantls;and: the - waving of' hate and - Intudkertilkh-fa. - Every sentence' - it suomed find - promptresiomic on the part • tif . 7-'@,..t'cO'.. - : :.:;':1..0.i0ii,4.1 .-. . lESEMM POrTSViLb - E,, ..fA. ••- , - _ SA:7II7RDAY,IiitHRILTAII,V24, -18- 6-16. TtL.r.: FREEDMEN'S 3311 , 14--T= VETO MESSAGE . . , -Regret andindignatinn were commingled in the inindSSOf . tt niOn men;; . and those anlieit Otis: 14 the..-Weifare of "the .pountiy,.- *hen . „the Y ... learned this .week,...that' the .- President,:hadi scut .lialek ,7 To-,the•LTaitedStateS his veto the amendment. in the" F'reedliten'S 13ureani bill; -briginateg . by Mr, s . o! .111 i rinis, -protect the loyt - d-Ijretugee.4 - ...:and freeth . Pen he - ..-This* . - Wei • ot .Pri:siden.r...lohnsoW 'When the remetuliert that iri - hiS message delivered to • (lettgress at thecOmnieneement of thesession.. .-.he - deClared that:the tueinhers Wetild.lint fulfill their „duty ftt . .legislatori; by accOraing . e.iitial and: coact. justice te . .alt • ..nien;.especis . .l ' .. leges to . hone.. :The only Object ordesign, of tlic .bill`. submitted by :lir% Trumbull and h : pass.ed :hy - a two jthirs'. vole -iti llon - ,if - iSlit . ..l:lWeiry,-ettitirdeini; every friend . 01 Who :were intimate. tertns: W3l it . '511713 seppOscd;;' . re: WaS ,to seenriititese - .rightS . to:all inen,:; - ;nd it may well Surprise the prig..- 7 ihrunr:; .- as it . certairdy r does•the couniry; . ..thai . r .. a Toll designed for such a purpose, should be refurtlf_d . .hy:Presidenl Johnson, isittt a . Stain- . ment, that. it. is • unconstitutional: I.stent - • with the. - actual dinditien:-pf the Conn: . . . The bill .which;has just been vetoed, and defeated finally in the Senate, -.did not pro: pose as some suppose, fo materially enlarge • the powera-of the Freedmen:s Bureau as it . already , exists.: _lt is an entire misappreben. sion to stippose that such was the object of the bill, .or . ..that suCh . would he its ,effect. `.lt proposed little More than - to giye the sane lion laW to,Whatalretidy done jihout . any -statute or- provision. 'Under the op eratiOns. of. the Freedmen'S -Bureau as, it ex ists. -courts 'are Itch' by it throughout' the entire region of Country. etnbraced by it This- is done under...the . military authority 'of the United Slates, as laws in the -rebellious . Sint incoMpatible with thitauthOrity, . are at this time set*aside. ...It was no proposed ..that should be a:Perotaitent u , solution:. It Was `declared - deelare that the Jai , shoUld operate until otherwise provided . by •It Was designed to prOvide.notfit. tour. millions of emancipated stares •_c)r for .refu gees, but only:for - the indigent,' and.for• those unable to take care of_ themselves, and only until they could.become self:supporting.,. It was not ., triginated exclitiiVely for, the black's, but-it was intended to protect all Union men, who were liable to be persecuted atid'driven oat. . Settlers from the.. North, Including. d is: charged. soldiitrs who _located there, have been protected by IL., What the Freedmen's . Bureau' has" itecompl'ished in this direction . therticerdS :Therebas . ,beem saved to the' tiovernment .miliions of ntoney by• the establishment 91 . a • System: thrilagli: which employ Ant . 'has, - Men found for : the treed. men. They have been made sett supporting . • .rti wh9 otherwise would, have been , entirel , dc pendent.nn upon the bounty of the "GOvernnient for support: Not alchF. • the comparatively few' indigent - blacks the South have been provided, for, it is a_fact which the records prove,' that more white refugees have re ceived . support; . and supplies from the Gov eminent through the . Freeddien's • Bureau, than blacks have. • reeard to the cost of the Bureau Geri. Fisk;" Assistant commiiiioner for Tennessee, testifies that its effect was to decrease the cost 'Of suppOrting both freedmen . and refugees It redticed the amount which. had. been distri bated by army commissioners; and acteally. decreased-the expenses which the dictates of humanity in the Army had occasioned. Be sides, 'the Bureau :fepaye the country 'tn. the security it gives to labiar . iu the South, and in the increased product of cotton, valued this year one, hundred Millions .of dollars, ..and during the coming year: at doubled that sum, if this bill had tieen permitted.to iso in= to operation—Ar. twenty.dollati'product to one of expense. _wbile the:systemwoitid-se= ctirapeace, andihanienise - thevonflicting in terests now at work ha the.BOtitti.. :The test - Alimony of , latimx Men who live in the South' assuf* tis be -the:effect of al „ , corrtinnance of . theliqrearLD - The Prestdentlioideetion that thlablitwit44 create .a mithiplisak,pcjcipicera thro r Vicatt the South, ,LS*o : filiTi - :1 1 4 6 result of t deratiading •PeriOrsi°l3 of iti*-4tril47;9B,:4***llt . • sence of the Ifithild, I:itlvikthitt undee,'lljaatat6 Go' ttess :the,--enrase 42foutin,-thitty; ais.tTiPts *o4.kt milbt,itigi;AMll4l4c#Al all There is no force in the objection. _ . _ .If. llte:Fl'il- : 11 1*1 14 .4 1 1 4 n o t: 4llBte d. ir?.theetartilt,;lli*ed' 4 4 p9ivcfsarg• .44, tl'iiiiit:''clO*3; the •Freedirienwriuld hav e been... ineasacred, by ; thousands ; T.lniull',4 l Ti ',would hiiieiitfeit. v ' audit .entirky Out drSp _ of,Agt.,seOtion.;,,,th , landtk , N9 lll d , hav , e , r.e''. mained uncultivated, • dli reign of terrorism would have ensue tL: •., a 414, ~Gen: Thomas reports minYinindefil of blacks, mid. white Union - Ista. • and says :that . the,liresenLe of a military force-will be neceasary in the rehel lions States for an indefinlee 'sierifid..,of t.int - e. The Freedirien' 'Bureau has protected. not only the blacks but the whites, AmongwhTn are many Northerners,. whit haVe goneithere s •been 'to-settle,' and invest 'capital to build; up the . South . again. . Such lia, and • is• the .: this •. • . 'Freedmen's:Bureau .New, veto of Fred' dent iofinsorf will be understoOd . ,by - all that. is brutal and rufflainfat the South 44 giving license to any abuse and oppression of the blackS and 'Union men, that : white malignity and rancorous "bate chin . devise it Will be understood as it proclamation :Of licenie to wreak their malice or their: lust. upon the hapless and betrayed blacka and Whit e Union ists. Tbete are thou Sands,. of innocent .per son§ now• living -whom this - veto:conaigns to a p . airtful death belore the cloie of the current year. The wrongs anti misery that•Will:flow 'from this ' pt, taking it alone in' a huntanita rhut point of .yiew, Will 'yet' show , the Presi dent that he has committed a great error:- : The - President 's 'argument ' that the bill is unconstitutional is peurile, for if the objection,' theabsence of representation of States'affect ed by its provisions, he Ytilid. Congress never had a • right to pass a law lev}ing direct taxes ' upon . . these States; and had no right to de . dare thoie States'in rebellien. or. to' pass a : law 'to blockade their ports:: '' . This argument . , holds good far us the executive . mita dur- hog the . war, connected . with the South, - are • coneerned. '. They rous t he in the• President's, vieiv, ;equally. unedistitutional and 'illegal This position of•the • Pre§ident is not : . unlike that of. James.BuChanan, 'who at the begin': nom of the War . - declared that :'secession was clearly wrong hut „that hehad no . 'constitu tional power to.preyent it, :.• • - -. • , • . The. policy shadowed forth in . the veto message - Of . tins bill, Will tot receive, the sup: port Of • the Union. party. r.For moriths there ha's been suspense in .regardio which .side the President would take. He_ was solicited before-the New York and PemisylVania• elec tions last year to declare in raver of the Union • . tickets and. agai nst the. Copperheads, - He refused.., ...But the people decided these elec tions,_ as they can again, without...him: By his.lenient dealing with Davis . and . the other s leading traitor. treason everYwhere Was en cattraged and took .new . lieart. Ori this point Col. Forney in writing to ' the -Press from Washingten,, says : it was es common to:ridicule *lid ekeernte the indi cate in the South, as it wan, to* rottrnge and. CheaCthe pegroes. Deb:Minns of the :.leading.and. most pro-, .scriptive Democrats paid regular court, and , were re .ceived almost in strite.st the Presidential mansion.— Frtito Pennsylvania we had' each melt es Senators . Cly. mer and Wallace—the sianderms of, Andrew trohann in 1503..wh0 led the Copperheads. in the Legieletare. When They refused tontine him. to speak in the Leis-. lative halls : from New "York we had such men as Jelin Can Buren, who was almost ft gw:At: and-thellaily corrs fluent of the Presidenr t . and fmmtheSontirthe Persons' legularly admitted and attentively.heard. were the des perate-leaders of the 'recent Murderous iebellion.= illeanntile. the Union members.- of Cont.ti.ess watched these ezfrnOitileary pmcsedittge. with undiSseinbled sorrow: .I.inwilitne to belielri that. the men iyho had sought the life of_ the ne t One, rejoiced in.thedeent of . our armies: denounced the execution of the astWsins .r Abraham Lincoln. and 'covered the name of Andrew 'Johnson' ‘vith indescribable ohlogny; . were believed. 'much less confided in, they calicempon the•Presitient. and counselled with. him lit . the most friendly , and fra ternal spirit Mortified es they were-to see him entta tatting and listening to the. Cntmerheeds of the North and the traitors of the' South. bilmillated.by his tlt-di eested, incoherent' and illogical harnnortes as he re ceived - end .arovereti all. sorts Or delegations—they sought; in every instance: to snpitress .their rip- !viten.' shone:Thus.everything was done to avoid. postpone,- and render impossible; the condition. of things which, it now appears, has Peen for Months craftily. Sectniuus -1 y end treaehemnply preparing% . Not a 'meanie WAR contemplated by these Taithful Representatives that did at find its, source ortneourreteritent to the pledges andi assurances of Andrew Johnson himee.lf. • . ' .Amid.the. dangers whiph • now threaten us by the apparent 'abandonment by' the . Presi dent and a few Republican Senators in Con gress, of, lite principles held' by the great •un ,-,n party of the eourdiy. the lOyal millions. of t he'Repeblic•shorild stand fir e m e n and stead ily uphold the hands of their - rePresentatives •in Congress. : They'should declare ht unmiq taltable -terms, in . favor •of.every essential amendment•te . the Nutional Coitstittition ; of Hill and ample protection to the:Freedmen of the South; of the political and civil elevation of the resident colored race 'of the biStrietiof Columbia'; and against the reorganization 'in 'every insurgent section of the' recent rebels'; against the . .ekputsion, or . .diseouragenient of free-ernigration to 'the . Sriuth ; against a ,sys.- - tem of and:merciless -proscription of in dependent, earneit . men ; tiriainat the pardon and restoration to civil. rights. of 'the leading traitors whose hands . are red with the`blood of our brothers; and fight to the hitter end, tigai OSt.t he elevation to pOwer of the Copper head party. 7lte•Erniori party of this country carried it safel,ythrough a terrible four fuur years' war; , 'the bones of its slam:tittered braves lie inferred in every Southerit.State, and it defended the man-who now trifleit witli itsprinciplea When be nas slandered as was thought unjustly : 1 :It miim.close wi the ranks shoulder to shoul der, and . ra 'sing aloft the, banner •tif Human I'rogress, Hurnan Freedom= and Equal Rights'. press on to new victories in the cause With the.good old motto,. this niseinANnum : nri 1 am-untack ever uppermost in the mind, the /tight moir win.- 1 . .:.In:speaking', of the ,present ditty of the, , niembtra of the Union, party, "Oceasirinal" well ohserves : • • -.. • . ' , They mast abandon all. aspirations for place; and the compensation for this asentice. if it be one. Will be in the fact that it is far better, to be in a position of honorable independence than to , be: associated in the ' ' Government with those who have- steadily ffaytli or plotted - tor its du xpfall. : fin' they will no, bavotong to Walt. These ere days ht ate Ift pee of purifying tri ale. Nit matter how threatening the : daniters that sur round r t s. a n d hijw nover .and weistity:the . ditties de mending- onr ronsclentiCius energies, both are to be preferred to that egonizing snspenee which has hereto fore been simply advantageona to the Copperbeede and trailers, and , damaging to the matanent interests of . . , REPRI:gENTATItE 00/BLAND has furnished us with` the" oullines, of his bill for the ap-. pi:dement of mine inspectors, which ice will give in our next. It is an important * measure, and much care 'E,hould be taken to have a pei'ectly unobjeetionahle'Act passed. From a glance.atMr. - Crosland'ss.bill. we.tltink that it will need. some 'amending:before It can be. consideredeptirely. IVe luny appreci -tile the necessity Of 'having in' the Coal Re gion 'competent inspectors pf num o.pro tect life and property from the dangers mei:- lent.to -the bash - fess. ' • - . • Xarat Affairo. Weekly Almanac. Cify ' PE N 1 w „,, ! I N aim I Isms 8* .4;5 .: 44 6 :41:6.45 3C5 49 , .3815 DO 6 ST:S .51 6 65:6'.53. 6 34 s:.'sal 43 9ATQ . Rf4Ii~:. ScNinmr..'.... Mniiritor :;.: .27 48 WZDMISIDAT '1 Tuilsispir 2 FTLIVAI.:.. •. . To-ntorrotc.—Eightlt Sunday of the year, rind seeonii.• in Leat. length, 11 • bouts :an& 4 . ul nutea., . . . . . ir .l .l"...Sinith, a:butcher, Of -Columbia windy died suddenly on Wedneiday night, of. tato, veil . at Royer's.HOtel, Alsbanny. City: .Cause, appo The. Unit:in men Swept. Athlaml on "Fshlay o last • week, at the Boiongh- electinn, electing al their cazniulates . .troin . Phief Burgess down. Goo( for Atibland, She knows herArrto interest. . . . . . Preit.e.A Decorated War....-41.r.- T. C. Berl, !of Ta malpit..lisi left at our Stori; speclinew - .of Fancy Dec mated Frenca China Warev which Jr! paten no beetta and whieb be SW ea be can • thraith from Rd to .per mat Weather 00 pries... Any dftign desired be:placed upon any Article. that,. may. be ordered frog him... Ete.farntabea.all kindent Cidna Ware at yer, '7l 7 • liez:ance. —A. reettingirr. Patna) Division, will:m.4mM at its hall on: Mon gyeidfitlituttrtil lAN:it:shwa is requeitea, Ifirturtanoe will be bronghxliehate :tkosAtsSOnc.7-,:.. -• AsiSksting Park, which lyiworitigneed, ,f,fg : , : ". - Ar r ednephifes..eping . 14 irsd:, MA L - t sin*qa, Ate -unfacriraW — 2 , 1 37 6 110 1 1 1 : 12 0 1 0 1 4 , . 1 afte:IxOtie *4 13 0 IRigJtelietd 41: 3 — .Now • - =ter -.'• Se . says tha t' 13s1Eraliefi a8% liiindustriminlylarthe the church under his &aro, there. and•will con thiiiirtotifts bf- Agent, to. procure funds nec essary , for. the 4 °4' pletion of the ehrircht - • 41' are *et ellelen.tle,litditilitiompiuden otti .ganlied. here? There is. abundant material for splendid organisations, in the experienced voter ant the-lata War now in our past. It is true r : 111 ° 1 " " 0 igeellnitilit. taw; hut there should be spirit, enough here to or ganize - without waiting.- . . . . . Nl* iTa . Alahlintan - ga Streo#, :will be tan-. questionably, when tort:midst - I:* one of the, most comfortable and one of the neatest buildings, for public purr Ol eases, to' e Stake.: Mc ' 'Main hall is app_mathing.emnPleilon yeryat.Ofitc . torily We .understand that Mr. Sherry, *his was here some sibee,-„and 'who' with- WA icompsny has been:playing ;successfully throughout the • State, ochtemplates opening in the new fiall•in,.Aprili- 7 lls•has sublefltobis•comp:mr- smite fine perforM 7 ere ; has, new scenery, and wi'cal rousic,;., - • . . . The'following real estatewill bo- exposed "for sale.by the Sheri at the. Cotiit Ticiu4o iu this Mir o:ugh, on ,saturday,-,Blareli 10, 1866 : ' • 'Tract of .laud ; dwelling • and farm, Pinentove township., as the property of Jeftersou'and ' ' ; • . • • :Lot and dwelling; Girardrille; an the 'property of Elatnnel 'Bennet. • •' • ' • Lot arid dieelling, Pottsville, as 'tit& ittoperty.of. Oathatine.DitibL.. - • • • .:•• . . 4fpnheish. , following leerS - Were elected on Friday last: • •• • Tnaricp, OF ThE rEada•-.Jobia L. Cohn. • .TanasernEnf-George Mani. . .• '- •. • ••: ToWssurn Cr.... - Ena-Lewis•Stralich: - . • .. Surtnizect its-711arlis E. Echert,"Dahicl Koch.- • Stntoi4, Djakerons-lteuben Roy and Edward AnDiron-Reuben kny. • - • .- . • ..• . . . Judging froni.the.nntnher of diseases to which thdse animals'-whose: flesh' foints, 9D important part 'of, the' food of the, people everywhere.are able.of late;-there is some danger that :vegetari anism MeV beconie a matter of necessity. to ad dition tollecattle. disease, it is stated that a se rioiwtimilarly has broken out among the swine in some. parts IA Ilurmie; Which bids:.put a stoti-to pork eating. • A small insect called the trichina,.geteinto the body of the animal, where 'it is:propagated-aCa rapid rate, and • wich has eauled . the deith'of; numerous versons Who have eaten of the porliitlested with Deaths (nun the sameoanse haie been reported in this conntry.. . . .. . . Thablen: Piii /z of,, - an . Oki Oitiien.—On Wednes day.night,oflast weeltAlfr.' Henry Reiner:hi, aged 84. years, *lto resided in Pine eve, lefy4h.lionse; a a oeighhor ilbottt S o'clocit to : return hothe. In conakmence of hia.age 'end nftrafity ; the dark: ness or the night,. and inclemency. of the . Weat 1)- er;'he was accompanied te,vithin :a few:hundred steps of his' do,n. hy'a yolinglri.l.ll. Nothing more vr iM Feet/ .of him pntil the follOFving • morning at 9 n'iloett, viten. hs Was-found dealt in: an' alley, near the spot Where the . yonlig.man.ha'd left tutu It is.snpposed that he: wandered in tlm'darknosa* to the spci where.he.was found. -DLIT.-. Behmehl was 'a native of Lebanon County, and &soldier of • the War of 1812; ~-'. ' • . - • . • • •.- , . . . The3lfflaiiipori Boroft f ill F , leetiort:—The'remilt of • tfie•L'orougli election . took place on Fri day of last' week, in - Miillleport, was 'ai3 lottowa 131J1L6F., 4 3:4-498.eph .1.11111. T. Tow' COTYNCIL—iI tunes Stepherui,.Joini TOWN CLEitli-LF: WrlcheisOr. • Scrthor.. Rerrdan,', Andrew Ectire . a(l l .. - r, Tl•omats " • . Jr PFACV:—CIis. Bensinger.: liritu Cosrani.E...! , ll - enry ' Jun ;E OF ELF.CfIe.2O—G. J6llll ArLitions-D. F. Ritter, L. B.:Mbrgani - ath,. Jas. -". • - . . . . . . . . . . .. - neelO tion i n TRITIITIA on Tuesday .of last . week, resulted .inlhe . 5ueef.,..42.1 of tile. `.`tax-naver,..• I ii•kot,r-ybielf lia.s' fanned by members of both partite, N.vho etitikhlere - a,..thr- .ftinroarsays., the in; teresta" of *the , . bortin .7,h. of higher. importance Allan the mere ;:ratification .of .party. spirit. ...The fhl loning.is the:ticket; tilo•tteil in the South Ward: . ..61114F 1111tGE;:4. - ti-n. T: Hugheti...: .: .. .. litintivoif .CotTNCIL.---Thinipl Sliepp . , - . William B.: ti 4:CoNsTABLT‘-,,teht r Ro , e . VaTivlian, Senbot.'DinEcTo.itc--Mirn... - Rensingef.4. 3 years; 3 yeais ; Gideon Wiletblene, 1 ASSE:S.Son--liqnryT,C. inrand • . . , . . . , . Mittsvate•Ltorurifi Electic;!i.-Tlie fiillowing of .fiu•rK wei - c..e110.,c•0 at the. 'election held do this, Borough 6n F . fhlay of hiet-week - :- .-c }OtTHW.uww--.7tidgr—C.• In spe'ckirs__:: H.,.t. , , 33: ..1i0113;; , Jr. Ohißtc4l4e--Atoob 5.. E.: WAnr).=---:./wlge'-:-Jeremish Reed. : . -/n.a . pec PeterT. 'Mu( . • Mmt)LE II; Leib. • In spri:ir.ritzttpl.ieli.Row-rs, Peter Ftisk)l , l. Justice of the' Peg Reeser.. -..equitaNe-lienry .. , . . . • : ap...-...Tailge-Frod.,Tiari. , e'rr... inspec- . .1 tors— lip y 'I, •in tixertp a - - Win. Eli ;.ork. —( i • ; • •• . • • • • . . . N. W,:.AVA)! l ).—:l , ldge- , -Taii.'.Fncht haPectorg. ...-1.-rrAnhliii IT:tril::?:,faccili'titioeniaker.' , ..:J,/stire nt.lho Price—Fred. W. Cotirad.. )ohs able—John JUti ; ..POICCp . Nyn.S elected .Boropgj . l Asti§§ol'. • A Tirt:ra r. Meet ing 'of the Pet faville • Debating'. rinh..was held Monday evening . : 19th inst., in the hail' - the grammar - school 'hitMing.' on. epntre. street. • Dr: -B. s.' Langdon read ~ several sePefions -which were.well.rt;ceived Icy the andi .ette•e.- :The miestion eXerts.thegreategt. iotlinqiee, the writ hin. or spoken langnager- was: ably diactiSsed by Messrs. Prior and Marlz. thrrnative .and by liiissrs.lliangthin, Miller , aMI -RAZinl'in the. negati.V . e. ,. The nierns of the debate Were decided; to:be'in favor of the nftirnratlye• At the Meeting. on Moniiiiy evening next a lee-. be delivered byßev:- ''The folT. 'lowing . .tinesi question :—"Does Wealth 'exert 'a greater inilnonde-than k t edge ?". will' he:discn ssecl: -- bv Messrs. -• Cake and Walker in the affirmative arid Bechtel and Behalf< in the'.'negathie.:. . The use of. the' beautiful hall in the girl's grain mar.school. bnilding; on Centre street was. : genet= onlyigraitted to the for the . .pnrpOse of hold-' jog. its - triei..tinge."- It is - Well lighted and heated-: and has comfOrtable set f eea vbich will seat abinit (tree _hut idre.l , persons comfortably'. •It is. • a meld of excellence; beauty and comfort: We era 'colindent'Atiat thwititelligent :ladies and men : of 'Pottetille, cannot9pcnd an evening More please titly. than at the' hall of the-granimar schnel ..bnildint.T.-every Monday evening.:,. Let- the efub-bp .will attended,: and: the .programme : for. 'future. -meetings improved. The meetings %OM-. Menge at.l4 • • ' -• • nev.. P thc:.Si;erino Pr'esby terian- Cliurr.ll. ..thitl3nrongli, le'etitreAl in . Pottt4 tr. , wn.,,T'a.,. in the'. 'Presbyt Cria it el rch, 'cm Abe. 13th inst, fils.subject wai , ,"Thit . Si ucly of llisto fy.r. The Ledger of .Tnerda*:lnst i • thns• notices li•enitrcx. and the IP6tiitt.-: •. • • • . " . . . . Th aveh ine was- favorable, a Ilerie..litol• irilelti n geiit.itoiliirice was 11 , :8eonbiq.d who •we be. . Jive , verr Ingb.ly a oprE , cia tett the - .sPle , rdid of..thelearned Divine. The letitureri .was. a4 , eu-- th.ruan of a very venerable. appearance, being of: a tall.and eomutiodink, with a' high and ma-sive. tl,.eovered profusely With silversleitir,, 'and SnoW 7 Whice - beard..- •. - Dr. PLVAC‘iEn cumin -hislietnre , the derivation 'and meaning uf, :the - word IliStoryi . - and.thett alluding toPiaered ana.Proftina history; '-antiANielit and .:11.0ch;e History. ; The requisites , Of a taie'bibtoriau.Were stated . tohe.a - Inva arty and .ariunorjudteed mind. It wittild pitssilO'for , a. Vriltehnian to-'.write a true history of ,linglank oratillngliAimaniof Prance ;.impos sible for an Englishman to write'in impartial hikf • t t'vry. or. Anieriee, or..an- Ann- fican *- of The' teat nrer glanced brietlY at the - historitins atnient, and modern times, 'anti commented upon the Ni . orliA;nf Heicidntns, dicies, Xenophon; - .Nettioler;*Tacittii, Plifiy . antlother . ancietit writers, a : Hurtle,: Maeanlay; Presdott ; IS:ilicrr ft;. and:othere,of - - inodrn: times. One of the prinaipal'a of the , speaker Wail to . 'point out to students and readera:.the g n ood-and true i history—lueparate the, gad from the drOss, and to tiOn against-the fOrmatien of incorrect' ide as and opinions from the-study - of the prejudiced, ...chaotic adaintlieheiVoint writings of stiruu . The %cli No • discourse. of Dr: PLumitn was. a very. abe -One abOtrndilg• in fine•thoozhts,..intor -e'st log. facts. awl tha rnosft . .beautiful language. •It. Wlib undoubtedly ori. of the most 'eloquent'andinstructir'e Itcturps delfrered in our towo. . .• • . . I' Qorigsl»irg. : Election. , -: In Qrsivigsburg on Fri day of „last -- weelt, infll swept. everything ht,bire.o.kein. - . This is :I, harulsohie. g,sin, as. Last Davis, the enpp 'candidate for Audi; for General, had lkstnallinajority. \yen dohe, w).gsbnrg. The rasa , in AstAil, - is tnllows : • pOitx..l3inlewss.-- , -Union, Jno.. T. Clouse; 12.; C00.:, - 1..-cane'Orwig, 52." . •.. :rows "CO F. 011,.. —Union. Gee. F.:Kinimel, :- .74, nos'. Wagner, 73; , 'O m. : W..Diibert, 71; Jacob. Sovder,-74;-Se:ornon Miller, 73. COrt ;lee: Shantz, SG; Zoll; '513 ;Danl. IY•ihert, 561 *Eli Hahl mer, 26 sJehn T. rJlouse, 26.. . . , SE seer =DanEcroris:—Union; -Thns fr4y,' 74 ; J: H....Hayskr, 78; Jag: Thernt-en, 74., .Cnt....Geo. F.4lrner; 58 ; JaeolT Hoy . , 53 ; Griefi, 53. • J !TOE OF 111;EOFIb hi!), H. Madden, 73 ; Cop:, Danl..Bnyeri Jr.; .58. INseEeron.--Uniou, John T. Snider, 74; „Cop. Ilayner, 56, • . Told !rhea. Sehall, 69 ; Cop: .o w. Wignf r 56.•' • . • •. . • . - =IEEE= • CoN,ITABLE.—Unitm, ,Tobri I.e.:bengeo4;.7oi cop Bernard'• •.• . AYtll 11f , .17 2 - .6 A mitre :1:461-Q,.16 6 . 6 .5 . .. ifi1l 1, New•Nr...21.il 62 evn`g Assnasoß.- 7 :UDion, 3:MAroat,..73;,lleCtry Krebs „ . ".I-Tto* . Cotisiast.E.—lTiiion, John gretet, 44; Lit)iv, A.l.4ent 5kitt.45.5.• • • • AUDlToll.—Union, Eli liammer,- , 73: placed •on ticket without. - their knowlechtft or. consent. - - • • • In regard to title shall victory of our Union friends of convigsburg, we bare received the ioliotrivig, letter : ' • Oawmtintrao, February 22. I.Sq6. E 01 1 ,0116 • Mricres . -JotraaAt::—•.. In 'Union there is stiength.", We bold our usual. election on Fr:day lait. in our ancient town. for Borough officers. ' :.• . • ' GovernorLetchgre copperheads as usual, nominated tiChet,ttati after a deliberate 6 - ntsideration placed:two of our hrsttnion Men on the ticket for council,. think'- ins in this.. manner es blindfold niany•of the, true bine: lherdote,. nominated a ticket of our. liking, and also elected every One' from Jtidge ,of Election to. Audi tor.. AR soon as the polls was blinmd. all were iussiona for the remilL• In a' short time it • was announced that. 'the Union candidate for judge wan ,elected .bytizteen • • Yen cut judge' this -was .a• - great .victory over the Letcher -Soon.the• Welkin kw ;with 'hurrah after hurrah. In ten minutes , titrui anyone of the cop.:. . perheaos entdd.ha Aland On the street, they haTiardis -•appesreti. saddghlyt.and 'traveled Into theft.-boles to • mount over their derma. . „Orwigitiarg ban redeemed herself. and willtontione to benne .Ot.the best Union to +ens !tithe County.. We are.rosidy to say. and thit she mill do still better,liext •EnioTito.PE. ahsint live ceritiockan . thir-ifttkliriorii.ki'MeNi-; t.: , , , .. , ,l- ..., ~ ..„: ,-;,-, . . .: .. v ,..., „ .„. , . .• . , Boig .4hgitifgllTßibbtill Ald.iiik . faiiiinti ---- m . ... --c---- A . . y . thir s - ..- . .. s a i s i 0--i n i la - ... -,,. chael Maize,: rt• histlily'reepeoteitlAtizeti4 Ilitrryti t "4-41 a ' e rmeerit e trae - ,t7 - Of th‘ ehetee: r , 4 4," 5r ,-' c ',„ i i• - ' burg , ' Danphin Countyovrwr. driving a4eurn laden .1,11. bined.With other substances 41.8011 - griatter /there.. .with* beef on the piddlif-roatriestdinglrourlii-- jive powei,itato afford au eifeetuAl..antikitaroi di,,e„- nersvillestii.:PottOtliWittid jest arab is -itched the' 'ver.,Sarsamerlits is repined to custir.al..Suckiar'remedy is ot-•where seveprieka sume.thelatOnted, me- 4twely li v Ated by those %rho Buffet froze StitiMM3,, corn= try- H.rDnone wtts' 'foully itinttet•ed; lit was ' met .444 1 h ' that one tyldehWill "riccompyik their cure 14 Y fcnii rriBhi P e k wl4° ii * ) v itt e d ,, J ut .Itzl'clio'ilts..- th azmiv - A iglizeu'rg.r.lifce..,teer T 's ,if he had ;any: heir ,foe '4le, - r.: - ,‘ - ,'"„.-P. ..w el o y. i s comig i l i o ck zu d o t, louse Ame n o i rl y ( 4 ~,i, ' ....the affirmative .". Two of them . hen' jaipedinto' --' experiment:on many of the worst cases to he found in • - -wagon, and tall him that they did not .want ' the Miming complaints,.-Scrofula,"Screfelous. Sorel, beef obi th# the eid-witait } giu , rmot*Sytktid,, v illa* aod lilore‘u - Skla 'Disease.. Pimples; Parades, - te • did 'tale nif llyer kit ttfitoj t tiO., - .ltey rcitddr. ”Diptchaiiimptioni, - St. Anthony's Fire. • Rose. or Erg mnrder.liiriCATiet *Mai:IAN:F. him: , f . tilAwf-i` .sr*lns,7rettetiir SaitlittleUna, Scald Hend,MingWorm:, SSO land - $9O the proceeds ' of. the ealei he had rk,c.' •- • • •• : • • - *- - amilimusiiii7idurawaiworiarwawirtp -,. !glyibli‘lm;Temerha to i'mgo -A w :er i maW-m.mwitte • 4 1 . 8 P94 WtritZO qatee.trop„* Thee 0 0 11 10 r. nyMero by the prolonged:wss. otthis Sarsaparilla, and hly * anima - id Ibis .cota 1: 1 ,The ty; lis"iiirit in to, 1 Mtellatramtisieh In comparative health: • - g .. , ~ risk ig: dap tura and punishment: * .Female Diaesiea ire caused by figiofnla in the blood., • • - • - • :and are often soon cured -by:this -.Extract of Samoa . .10ernarl. iiteiktisisirMilliaike modlcirie: iiiesitleyou ' trivaiW4 irript* upon ~by. :s igic.Mug_ pietendins to be Sarsaparilla. while It • was nut.' When Son have needAYElPS—then. and not till, then; will you know ; the virtuei of Sarsaparilla: • For. minute prirticnlars of the diseases it cures, we . refer walla? *el 'American, Almanac, which the agent beiosetrameewtil 'gaining. ,4 13 44 0 .. , a4Whttca1l tor, IL'. ... • ~'• • .:, - - - - ' • Ayer's (Whin*" Pillis,*Tiii:' DM a girrifliit. 'Jaundice. Op , pepsia,indigesition: - Dysentery. Foul • btomich.: Headache, Film Rheum atism.' Heartburn arising from Disiirdered*Stomack Pain, ,orldorbid In 'action of, the ..Boriebs. Flatalency, ilme of ' Appetite, Liver Complaint, Dropsy,. Worms, -Gout, Neursight, -.and for a Dinner Pill, .- • - - , -"They are sugar coated. So that the'most sensitive mn take them pleasantly, mid 'they are the best Aperient - in the world for all the 'Mitoses of a family.physic. : Prepared by J. C....A.YER•& „ CO., Lowell. • .Mass.. and sold , - by all the' Druggists 'in ' Pottsville ; also by.all Druggists and dealers eyerywhere. • : '• • • ' Feb. 3; 'GC • . • ' • • t, a7~asteingtop rNytfaayr E: : the riMniitersary.eif-tiCbirth ;the, Wail* ington,:wasimore generally observed.in PotteYille than during many previous years. The weather. was. Springlike;•-and tempted many prtinrnaders :to our pniicipal •• thoroughfare, Centre ' street.—•-- yke..gs werethsplayed ' throughout the. Boroughi .. Wv-Kiliflittianede Weir as kept as it should be,.its•a holiday. ' - : Inthe morning 'a military :cmnpany emnpOsed of -Stalwart miners, '.and Organized 'About .two. .months sinceln- GirardVille.' this County, reached: .this - Borough; wenn received by a comndtte of citizens, headed by the Pottsville and es, eorted te the Union Betel„ •xyhere they - partook of. . a • repast: Tlie Coropiany numbered_ forty-eight men, dressed in the. United -Stares: anifortn,' and armed With the Springfield.. musket. ' They.'pre •aented a soldierlike - appearance, :and won"cora,.. rnendation foe their marching and other eyelet . - Howl. • The name et the-company it "Girard.Urt;: - on Guards.P.• The officers-" are, Captain, John Colleen ;,' Ist Lienteuant, Philip , Mongold; 2tl Lieutenint,-RobertGreen. At 2 o'clock they eat dpirilto a dirinergiven - them by Meeare.".Garreto. ' spri - and peattninwhoee employ most of the mew are at Girarilville. •3t-'vas served pp at the.Unt on Hotel'''friend -Licideninuth's bestistyle. Speeehes were 'delivered by Col.. Green and Gil: Wetherill, whlcla with some excellent songs by fhe members .of thii Guards,ea psol . the - . time to palm by very pleasantly.' , In. the eiteriing Abe . visitors returned home well' pleased we. trust,•with 'their reception and'entertainment 'in Pottsville. •• •• • • Dtirittg -the afternOn that arid. eriel lent . fire nOnipany, the "Good practised i heir. engine at Centre and blatiantango • streets; and threw a• streasni Over the' pole,'Which htabout . • a hundred feet in height. -This .erig,ineia:n. very -gopd machine, but still vi 4 cannot help.. believing that, the sire of the Borough, and: din value tit . property lierewarrant the•purebesing of a steam . the engine, . .. We. else believe that it is. iuipitra-: tivelyt':needed . at those :points in the _80r0n...114. • where . there is an inadetpiatelieaci.ef Water. The • late tir e i'4 Market - 'street -pro•yed..that 'eVen 'half Way out theetreet, the supply of, water was total; ly inadeqnatei to manage a large fire if. it shthild happen." The':-,best way to get a steam fire, ;;tie,' would he for the borough Council to ..make an appropriation, and _assess. 'the cost' equally on the tax-payers of the .llorough. :If we delay in this important matter we are fearful that a large ..fire:may'yet teach us an expensive lessen in the . necessity .of due, precaution against the fire Bing: In- the evenin g the Sunday i3chortl of .the Eng lish Church, Market street' held its.sn-. ruyersary, :the pastor elect—Who will cuter upon :his duties on the _lst Of .Aprilcondiicting, the exercises, which !where of a most interesting character. Tne Re*. Mr.:Koons, now in , Colorado, . who -did so Much by his verbena' exertions to !Mild np this elnircl, andrelieve it from pecuni ary diffienit ies, will we. know, -be tileased to learn -that his fernier chary is in a most. flourishing; •• ' Tito Seareerow.: , •• ,• . I:c.ne morningere4earee the sky • • • The:sun is.g . an to tinge, •. • . • • I started out, intent to-Scout ' • . • • •"The.woods•which tonnd did 17; ingu".. The broad expanse of ripening 'grain:. t. ... Which 'grew, before me on a plain: • - .When bn.said plait[ ef ripening grain:':' ' • Suspended by ii p•de, • ... • " • Garments quite now. did' •mbet my view, ' Upon a rising.knoll, -Which proved a suit Of RAO Sri.LE . ' Placed there to frighten off. the erowa:.' . While intheffeld Which there did yield. . . • ltS crop yellow corn, • • • • ' With radiant smile and . DISE.I4.ICOt t 8iT1,14, Toward me , came that morn, - 'A OiliO whose manlier plainly told . "., That he iii fee:the fartatlid Said 1, My friend. while I eitend;• • • With.frieniffiness. rpr hand; . • . , • • ..spose, that you. if I Mdge ... ; %Are pima'. of this lend. ' And•mi.his bright blue eyes did glow, .. , Regnick replied, yes. sir. that.s so. . • -Well, if ...that's do," I'd like to know, Why yoti bait. used saw.clothcs .-.• .. • To dock. a poll-uood a knoll, . . • • - To frighten off' the crows.. - For it to me" doth.strange 'appear, • - -- Thatany man should act's° queer.-.• . *ell, Tigle, aaid'he; - speaking. to Me;•;:.. . • ltmay seem cmitetthsitrill• - • • ' But. the suit therel beughtte; . • ' E re of . the •.STAa." heard • • ." • But us my neighbors-had, Ifoond, Beeri dreettifig:there - for • • "I felt more : proud andiolnedthe t• -.• •• 'Wen:Moving 10 that 'mart. And nqtrappene in this sult,bere, ". ' So perfect in each part. : .. • l• • And decked the man of pima. with.these,,.. "That he Might, frighten off the crows:: ~"..; , . . . . , . . . . .. nrTlllt 1,0 \i,' Tatars at which fine..faAdorkable: ready, raadeelothiah4 is Fold:. netoni•th : all' who' are bo fdrt4- 1 34 te.a.4 . t0 lauchase at 01;1' Stair Clothiiig...Einpo, •alutti, 009 Clienniut St.,'Sign of•the . .triitt; rob `'.!-I, .66-5,. : .-' -• ... • .• - PERRY. &:C O O.. . . - - I • - lllite Exßectorant • -•. etires. , Cone,bs.' Colds.- and all Diserisekot the Throat and-Lunge :Try it:. Sold by. Henry Saylor; Pottsville; • K. ',Wane. ?dineraville,.anAPragglits generally. • . Thee eon femeions and; Eskierience of nu 111 . 7511 id ..--P,ibliAhed foi the lienettt and te. a-GAP VON TO loti-Np ME? and others. who spiTer - from Neretruti Debility. Premature Decay •of Manhood: . 0f,e,.. Pultpl.Ong et the eunie time Tuy. • Mekss or &ELY-et:it:- I'y one who has cureil - him.elf after undergoing consid erable leaekery.., fly enclosing yinstpaicl addressed en-, abigle co pins;- free of charge, may-be had of-the author. .. • - • NAT,HA:s.i.MA:YrAIft, - Feb-11, :•BroOklyn t Kfoga , _ _ LIFE 'GROWTH AND BEAUTY; tondort • Grdy ; . 'Bair "Color • .:The Only ~Resiorer London • .." • Ifair : Cror- : •-.• • 'Restorer •Lolidori - ... Hair ". Rair Color .. - Restorer Londort ••• '. flair Color- .".Resto rer Gtlanged lialr'Color • Heir -• • . 'Restorer Dimino" Hair:Color •. • ' Restorer .London:" without • • Hair Color Restore' • Restorer. London • • ' 'Hair Coli)r '• Restorer. London' • Dyeing • Ildir Color - -Witc*pr It the only known' restorerof colo nand perfect hair .dressing combined. , Delicately perthrried.•.. - - .• Loadlin • Does: "1 - Idir Lfolor . , - Removes.Restiwer Lpildon • ). Irate Color • . ReStorer London not Color-; • all :Restorer. Leintion' • • Hair Color' - • :••• "-Restorer Lotsihin • Stain; ILatr Thindruit. • Restorer London ' • • Hair. Color •. • ," .Restorer• - London . .or Soil and' " . ..Restorer London • . Hair Color . • Restorer Loralim Color` . • Veiling: Restorer • Minus TtIF. HAIR SOFT.: :1{14.C8 TUE SOALT ChIIL.:4IT, nektditt ' . London • Hair Color. -• • • •Reetorer Loralcin 'dares '.llidr.COlor .• It will," :Restorer L.enicin . Their • C.for— •. 1: • -Restarer • London. .Diiea , 3es - Hair Color . prevent . ••• Ileatnier London' • • • • flair Colin : - Restarer °Ube • -Hair Color - -the 'hair - Restorer LondOn-.- • Aleir'Color • • ;'' liesPirer LondOn •Sealp. ,hair ColOr from • Restorer Lciudon.. • • HeirCol'or ••• •••• • .Restarer 'London ' Hair Color ;J . /pilaw'. ;Restorer ' 1p utialdrez, or preparation before or, after its flee applied hy.the hand or soft brush- • bM • ' • • .•IoNFS9 —j . ‘" will P9sitively Mott. the Tiair.frotit intc„•and • cause it : to' mow on , bald"..heiula in:ati caves where the folllelep•are.left.• . ', • • Ortiv. enntii.a • bottle six hottles • : $4.. 'Sold at Dr. SW AYNE'S. ,330 ;511,1.1.1i -SIXTH .Stieei:. above . .. Vine; Phtladm; all - ttke leading Dritelf=te and Fariey-eoods dealeri. Sold at - . HENRY SAYLOR'S' •. 'Feb • 1 .0 . . •' • ..Drivg.§tote.,..Potterille.- M P41`11.4111.7C .1!P: •CrililLlE It ,• . Pottsville, P.n: • AGENTS FOR 'THE SALE OF THE .• . WHEELER .Wllso N SUME=MSII E In BchnylKili tonnO, . . . . . • . A Clamber : of theie excellent Family Machines areal- way - e kept ,n hand; can lie .seen hi•operatimi hy.ealling at the corner (cf .Fifth and Norwegian:' Ste.. Potteville: • To atcommodate inersoile using, these..Machinee; a .supply of •llAciiiva Nram.re: MAnutas Oit,•and SnAr. and CFLAita's Vino:Am:in ail 'numbers and colore.• re, peclally adapted 4 . 0 Sewing . .. Machine u t se; will he kept' Thorough irritructions foi...working these Mnehines will ho givenio. potties purclUi*ing.; • • . . Ws ate. also 'A:ztintslor the etate •. • • - '• ' The Ilowe Revriiv.. • IllaCh ....• Whir: pnionvinced.to be equal to nuy of" the -Sed , inn. Machines; now in ;the market.' and is peculiarly. titrapred for heavy work. and :nartienlailv • tor sewing leather work, .. The shuttle. is lanzo and.Alin ncedi6 smaller. Malvin - tiny n:lier Machltin in 1140... '. •. . - Orders by.ritail willrecelye prompt atteiltipit...-Cll and . \aniline before - Orchiodng:elSendiere.• • - ; . , 11'1 A. it 111 I G D TOUNG•SI GREAT IiLIVSIULUGIEAT, WORE, or every, one hie own. Doe. tor—beings private. initnietor for married'perkins,. or . thOse about to.marry;thoth male 'nod .fetnale.. in evety: thing concerning. the physiology and relations of our ae - sal systeni:and tbe.p . roduel ion or . preveiitiottof off. spring,includingall the new disctiverlem. never belore given in the EngliSlikinguage, by. wv... YOUNG, fhle .feally,a-valuable' and interesting . .weik.• •It is written in plain language for the:general-reader. and is' illustrated with upwards of one Itudred - enc.thchtts.- All-jmung•married people, or those contemplating mar riage . the leistimpediritent to married life, should read thiO book.': it discloses secrets that' vety 'one should he acquainted Sall , it is 4i book that vo l vst be locked upotud not lie -about the hotre. Ii will be !not to:any. one. on' the 'receipt of 'Arty. cents.- Address. Dr:. ‘, - 1.1..L.1A•N1 TOPICQ..I , IO. 416 Sprite& St., s above-FoUrth, •• {Sept . '23, ...36-6m. • .11? riro o f You Gentleman tho suffered for'years.from Nervous Debility; ; Pverriature Decay, and all.the effeets ofyonthfut indiscretton, will; for the sake of sutfering,hrnablty. Pend fret; to . all who' need tt, the recipe and directions frir making. the simple:remedy by which hewascared. Bufferers.wishing profit .by the advertiser's experience ; can do k. by Addre.sing . . . . JOHN R. OGDEN. • Jan.41:.'66-74-Iy3. No. i 3 Ctiambcra St., N.Y. USE. THE BEST! DR. CLOCIIiiS:k XiIEtSIOR MIR RESTORER, . . % Perfect! girlie liestaree-ind Clair !tree:aim Combined, anal the best ps:epAratioii. for the'll'Allt :ever presented t o the public: Wilrin , every &tenure •restore Gray Blair to Its" original color.(ahether Blaek orli•oivri) Will caniie Hair to npon Bald Kends:- irbisiF the disease is not: hereditary, : ...Will .0400 p 'Nai r (atom Falling • 01C..0e- Turning Gray, •will :Care AG - Braptiones •o f the Stealin, ' will Remove Scarf, - Dandruff,' 'and anal all litehiagm. It is elegantly r perfitmed,-'and to all that can be deftred•ftw a Dressing:- ITIS.NOT A DYE, inatby supPlYinelhe Secretions of the capilla .ry,glande acts as a RESTORER, .; •It wiltnot :BOIL the tenet linen,or.STAM the nicest bonnet. :••• . • ifothen. will Lind that when Children's hair is harsh and wiry or thin and scant it, will immediately Improve by the rum of the Restorer, thereby laying the founda nori for a luxuriant bead. of hair- This spreseration contains no sugar of leador other articles deleterious to the hair all 01) . mmon in moat Hair.preparations now in the market. lt 10 used and recommended _try the clergy and the faculty, , • - .• . The proprietor Is aware that many-.have been dimp pointed by the high sounding pretense •of the runner etas preparations with which the market has been tilled for a few years.past, but such con dente does he place itt,the merits of his Restorer thathe offers in all cases to refund the monry,after a thorough Lela! of two hot , Cleat( it hub to givelterfeetsatisfruition. • We weal:Am it in every 'lnstance, and one trial will convince !be most sceptical of rte merits; ; " Call for DR. ID L OCIEN, Excelsise flair Restorer. AND TANN NO oiireg. Sold by all Drug gists at sl.oo.per bottle, or sit hales for $6 00. • . • • Dr. F. 13,t,LOCK. Proprietor. ManchePter. Si. A: . 14'. SANDERSON, Druggist, Aput fur' Pottsville,-Pa. Jan . • l art i t STR E N GTH :: - HEATH:- - LIFF..HEALTH=-BTRENGTH: ' :.: . .LEM-13:EALTISTRENGTH. Hunreds and thousands; annually. die prematurely, When; jr they would gtve'the Great French Iternedy,. • DIU JDATI DELAMAHRE'S ._•. • ' •••• Celebrated Specilic• IPillei. " Preel by:Gram:dere Dupont, , N0..214 Hue loin . - .Pitris. from: the prescription of Dr:_Juan.Dela nnarre. Physidan of the Respite! du Nord, on .tariooltdere afair.trial..they would ilnd 'immediate re:. 'lief. ins:Lin. a shot t time,. be fully restored to Health' and Stretigiti...ltllised in the practice-of many eat 'Dent. French 'physicians, with. uniform - snecess..'and highly recommended as the - .Only prwitlee and Specific :Remedy for all persons suffering fmm General or Set , .ual Debility. all cerangentents of the : - ,Nervous Forces,' Melancholy, lose of Muscat ar Enerzy, Physical ' Pros. tralitin‘Nervotannitial.' Weak Spine, rawness of- Sphitor. Of-Vision,,Elyeteemy Pains Back and. Limbs. Intrintency, arc. • • • .. • • '; -No langulum'ain convey - an adequate. ides of the ink mediate'and ',Almost ..inintenions change . it'ccatcons to the debilitated and Shattered system. - in fact. it. stands. unrivalled as au unfailing .cure of the malitdias above mentioned. -. •• - s•-' : • • . Suffer no utore..bnt use The Great French Remedy • it will effect a core Where' nil • others fad; and although .a powerful _remedy, 'Coot:tilts nothing hurtful ,to the most . delicate Ciinstltetion.. . •• • *- •- • Pamphlets. containing full particulars thd directions -for using, in English,. French, Spanish and German at - company each box, And also seat free to: any address ' when requested. .Price One Dollar per -box't• Six- boxes for Five Dol. Sold by all Dniggistg threughontiThe world or 'wlll hr Sent by' mail, - . securely sealed . friiin all 'obset vation, tocio'rilug specified price. to, Any, Authorized agents. Beware. of Counterfeit/; 'apd "Indtationti. • 'Proprietors exclusive Agents fat America,' OSCAR 'G.. MOSES CO.; Conrtlandt St New Yolk. AnthuriAerl Agent Tor Vottsvillt: HENRY SAILOR, Tit - Magna_ Shindel 4 Bond.. • [Feb 3,'"6 -5- y ' THE GREAT ENGLISH . REMEDY. PROTECTED BY ROYAL LETTERS PATENT • . SIRJAMRS CLARK'S . . . 'Cclebraited Female Pigs Prepared front a prescription of Sir Clarke, Phyyieiroi E.,rtrooliznary:t4the Queen'. ,This Invaluable meili , girte is unfailing in- tire cure of pailifttl and dangefona diseases to - which the impale-constitution Is' 'subject: 'lt :ranch-Tates all ex ,ces's and-removes all obstructions. from whsterer cause,' 'and a speedy cure.rnaY be relied on, ,••• ' • Ladies it Is particularly stilted_ .•It %yin; in a quirt: time, bring on the thoidhlY period with regularity.. . • . -Each bottle..priceGne Dolla..•bears the Government stairm of Great-Britain, to prevent counterfeits.. - • .` 1 • . CAUTION.' • • •' -• . • ..Pirse,Pills should nnl lir.tOkett by Females.dur ing the 1Y !{XT 7'H BEE •o'. Pregmzie ell," as tOft.are.stire.l4.li,7lhqra. Xtiscai - riage, bul oil f er lime:Wiry are e gfe. • Every woman knows that the blooin of health must fade, wtarthe - slightest . irremilatlty .or obidinction of the TIIOIS6R, - -Tbes Pills are truly. the woman's friend in her hour 'or trial: and. the only sure, punitive and -never fail`ng eMe•il:Stippression of nature, front What ever ef1U,4 , .. ' So mild that . the feeblest mu take them. .with-perfect,eecuiity...yet so powerful in their' effecti,• . that they. may beaafely wiled,: a never failing, Regula-• . • • .- • . In' all cases of Nervous and Spinal :Affections. 'Fable do the Duck.' and • Limbs, Fatigue on.slight exertion. Pulpltation.of the Heart, .11ySterics,and.Whites; these' 'fills will effect, cure when all-;. other , means .lutve failed: and although a powerful remedy,: ..dis'not con , tain ikon. catomel,•antimuny. or anything hurtful to the. constitution.. • . , . . . . . . . , • .Ftill directions in the pamphlet around each package, which ebould be carefully prakenTii. • ' .. • • • • . SOLD BY ALL. DRUGGISTS Sole General Ae • cut' ((Jr the United Stalei and 'British Domiuions. JOB MOBIiS,.'2I Cortlandt Bt.; N , Y. N. B.—sl. - 00 and Cithrec ccut • poidage bitIIIIIIS cur closed to anyanthorlied Aaent.. will euSure a bottl. au'tu'mns tin • Pill‘!. by 'return moil: securely sealed frion all observation., ' • Feb '66—.0.1y 'Enfeebled and Delicate Cononilntions, of bottveexes, use: neltnhold's Extract Buchn.. ':lt will liivebrisk end energetic fee:fuze and enable you to. . aleep well. ' • '.: . - • • Oct:ex, . . .To •NR‘cil Tnt 13T.6 , 11 , . :AND • BiiiTIPT the enmplesioil: 'Use llOneentyated ld 'Extract; Sarsaparil IL • One bcttle, equal's In strength -one gallon.a.the Syrup of Decoction; . • ' ..• 'ITCIIII. ! ETCH!. _ . . SORATO Fl I SORA.TOH 11. • SORATIFfiI ! WIIEATON , S OINTMENT will pre thel.tch in 48 hnun. • • Also . eure...SALT.RTIEUAL ULCERS, CHILBLAINS, and all ERUPTIONS OF.TFIE . -Price s 0 cents. pi , r sate by all.Druggirts.'. •• , . . - .By.l4eniling:•fio bents „to' WEEKS &POTTER,'S s oIe Agents.; 130 WaAhluszton Street. •Iloston,. It - will beforwardefl by .mall, ' all: fred poetlyze.. to any.part: of. h linited . Suite.4. - • ; Sept. 23, .66.-738-6 m. A TEINC.4* OF BEAUTY-IS A. JOY FOREVER. TnoSe - schn'ileSite briiiiiincy of crimplexttnn, mnst pn- Tirrand enrich the blood. which tostir.s-: tie, EXTRA CT Sklif7A I.4dt • itftaritihiy efarp.• He-. it, IC no "intent medicine.. Ask for ilehnholits. -Take no ••• •• • . Oct. 2S. '65. /1.A11161,Vg FaTgACT OF SA A.S.LrARILLA cleanses and, renovates the blood, instils the vigor of health into the .Fysteni. And purges out thelatuors that inake disease. Mahe no worn .Uniptense:tat . and Unnafe s, Rensedieo toronpleallun.and dsingennor 1J Hhl3lD (t LD'd E.Tisecl•*Bucinir.•and loveurnr SD ROMI %VASIL:. • • • " '.65L-42.6m • ItAIIt DIVE HAIR DTE Batchelor',. Bair - Dye is , the • best in . the world. The only true and' perfect DYe,,iiirmless—ln stroll L.gous. and .RellahlO—,produces splendid" Black or Natural.Brown—'remedies the.,311 effectsef Bail Dyes,• and frequently restores the originalcolor: . • Sold- by all Bali:mists: • The genuine is signed, Batchelor, Si 'Macho' Ptreet, New.. York. ' • • . • February .10,•‘.1806.• .• • . ITCII. scawrcallo 3IOItE. " . VI I tqCll'. : • • -TETTEI-0 , • • • "DIP' l.De.• Swayne's ointment.' .i-TETTER"'• DelSwayncisCintment... 4- TETTER” 1 . Iall" . • a . "TETTEft" • . “ICR" '• “TETTEito • • • • • • .•"TETTER":' "loll". •• TO FAIL • . '''TETTER ,, .. • • ' . '• • !`ICI • •IN CURING THIS . • • . • . : . “TETTEP, ,, -• '• . 'TORMENTING . ... •• `'THTTF.It.;•. - •.• •.• COMPLAIT.• •:* '!PKTTER" • • "ICU" •••• • . .1.. : : ••TET.T.EIf.t • DR.. SIVATNE'S . Cures Itching Piles. Sultitherin: Seald -Head, Bash, all. • •• • Shin Diseases;. •. . • . ' . I • • Price. to cents. '..13y sending GO cents to Dr. Swayne 3.30 NORTH SLXVI Street. Philadelphia. 11-1 - itrs will be roailecpto any 'part of the United States, free of chards, . :Sold by fIES:HY Skt.LOR, Drtiggist..Pottsvilie. NoT w FFW WORST titseurians that afflid mot kind arise trim part-options' of the bloOd. Extrart of Sarsaparilla is' a r e medy of the nil:abet value, Ort. `2S', •:. . ! . .ierange, True'.-:EVery:' young •,lady and gentleman in, the United' States can '.hoar som ething very much to their' advantage • by return mail, (free of charge.}: by addressing the enderqgned. Those having fears_ of being humbimged,will'oblige by not noticing •this card:: All others will plea.se..address their. .nbedf-, 'ent.veriant, • • 'IIIOS. • Jan 2t. . 831 Broadway,'N.-1%-: A CI:ItATt. Ssrmilt SKIN AND BEACyliet. CONteLeXI9N felh)Stii tbe:uae'nflnikks Concentriaed Fluid Ex, tratt..Sataaparllla. - It removea black 'apotp, pimples and 'all eraptinnapf the skin: • OCt. 43-6rnr . •. A Cough, Cold, or sore Throat, ' REQVIEFS IM‘IF:IIIATE ATTENT(O - N, .ANT SUOIILD EN cnErli EV. Ii A.OO EL TO CONTIN UK, . . . irritation :of the . - Lan,voi a' Perminent ~•' :•Thront Affertion, or. an' inenra- DieenNe • . , ...-• • 'TS OFTEN THE RESULT.. • ''::BROWN'S BRONCHIAL TROCHES• liAk LNG .A DittECT INPLyrk:NpE to: Tax ..PAZIS, CITE LUXE.' . . .. 'Fai • Bropplbitin,• Amahinaj:Catarrlii, Con sumption and ThroatiEliacanen..". -• iiOCl-:. . :,.. 11'.5 in, VISM WI II , .4.. ATS • Griot, 'firoorts. ... SINGERS : AND Pdaii.,C SPEAKERS . . . . Will And 'Troches useful in 'Clearing the voice when taken helore'Sluging "or. Speaking, and relieying the throat after an uniting' *diem otthe vocal .orgart , ..- , -. The Titiehei 'are recotemended !E,lmi . prescribed byrity‘ sielans, and have hadteithitonials from eminent men throughent the ... country.? Being 'an article. of. true. Merit, and having:proved : their efficacy by a testjo • many 'years, eaeh year Ands them to new imam* in . variont parts of the world, and the Trachea arenniser sally prtinonnced better than ether articles. • OBTAIN only "Bann ri's Becti , ic at in and do not take , any of the Wprthleis itrtiona th 4 may be . . . Sold. everywhere in the trnited States.. and in Foreign. Countries; at 35 cents per box... ro ..conormiptivco.:-The advertiser. having been restored to health in a few weetti - iv a very sim ple remetlY, after having Buttered for several years with a severe lung affection. and that dread diseme Con. sumption—is arixiOs to make known to' his fellow sufferers the Means of cure. ". . . To all who desireit:. he will send a copy. of the pre scription need ffice of charge),. with the. directions for preparing and using, the same, which they will find .II et • crsus for CoNOVMPTIO,2I.. ASTIIMA, ..13/SONCOMA Conant. COLDS. and all Throat and Lang Affections. The only object of the advertlier 1n 'sending. the Pre scription is to benefit the afflicted, and spread laformit- Hon which he Conoives to he irivaltutble, and, he hopes. every sufferer.wili try his remedy; se it cost them nothing, and may. prove a blessing,.: . • • • • Parties Wishing the prescriptlim: rams, return mail. will please address . Rev. EDWARD A. WILSON. Jan.. f 4, 4-Iy. WilliamshargikAinffS Co., N- Vegetable etieilinn Hale Renewer . bee Proved itself to be the most perfect:preparation for the , imireversoffeied totheptiblie. • ' • It a:vegetable corimound,.and contains no injori cina_properties whatever. - WILL'RESTORE GRAY HAIR , TO ITS ORIGI NAL - 7t .tall ..• • . keep tholutir from fallitiz out. - • - • It cleans the acaly and fro m the hair soft, lustroni and eilken... It is a spletiilld Lair drcseinz. 2 • No.person. old , or Tonne, should Lail to' nee IL_ . - IT IS ItEC OMMLNOBD AND ..-litifil) BY TUB • FIRST.XEDICAL AUTHORITY.• _.• 'C 'Ask for Belli:Vegetable Sicilian Hair HAtnewer, and.take no 'other. • • • • ' . P. itku. & co;,. - • . . . • aloha& N. H . , Proprietors, for saleby all - r. . Angto.t.l2, Mtg. - Pira, lIQ L. ES ALE•AND RETAI CITCRT,ES OAICFORD - 4 80118 ',CONTINENTAL lIOT piiii.AbELPECIA, • EI. Hare now open their lupe and splendid ate* ot Laill&P FUR cejahmi!. COLLARS. • , .• , • . AND ./10(O.3. Alio the llne!t assortm FANCY-PUR - CAPS. MUFFLERS. Area GLOVES ever,belor:"/...M. by them. and whkh are warranted to Was ".tel PPALNG Fl HorG Nov. 4. e - 44-hett 4CiigiOnfl a DiDTO criori. —The new.liethodist Eptse o p t) in Ashbuoti, rno Providence'preventin g) .w i n teed bji appropriate. servim to the. wn , . iktior God, on SABBATIL, MARCO . 4th, r..e or Et. Ruse,: D,., of flaitioiore T , iinitienttniasfent; P r event to of&iate ay Services to commence at 10,4 3t , m EA- . "• ,kiherPublicis cordispy invited to att end.' pirp uz Ea'st pa. Conference Of thell'vi ti ilott4-sometimes. though errne eone l y , „ let c blettiodistto- - will hold its annual si , ssion at Schov,4 l - I:raven this jotr, commencing on .Wedneseay. y. jest: Between aixty•and seventy ministers will attendance:. • Rae. JOsien LONG. oneof the Bishops or t 4 p . ... helical 'Association; prea tomorrow rs i z .evenine.-at 0 1' Jecloctr„,in the Evatereiied cha r d, Y d , Callovibill street. between Third and - Fottrth. - ", • public are invited to attend .. - Dans •. : • NOTICES. - • - •• pike . . , • • tarsieuiadist E. Church ,S,icc ri d ' i t; I t t,,,e - ma r ket, Rev J. B. McCuttoomi. Pastor,. hath, - at 10, A.' M. I, P. Meetin s g, ab TneedaY evening:at , TX o'clock. . - .110 - " Trinity Episcopal Chnecia.....w . V . 'Church is undergoing repairs .services will he boV a the Court Honee at 1634 0 . c10c.:. A. M.. and 0 ortWelsh Congregational Church, t et t R. Law's, novices every Sabbath. alternatel. at o'clock...A. M.. and 6 o'clock, P.M. . .vr - lts Nuptial Chnureb.—Sandaynu.rol„,.o. : = vice (tog o'clock.) evening servke". a o'clock,) con , - :11V .1) Mahantongo and Tth •- 'streets. • - 7" • ' R. H. ASTLN, Pastor. • . 'Residence Mahantonco above ith Streit lir 'Union - Prayer Meeting., every Sai l ,4 4 , 'Morning : horn 830" to 0„% , o'citick, in the frame Chari 7 • onsommdstreet, between 'Market and I ...lorwe'gian s t . All are , • ' • ny-E., angelical (Thumb. Call4whill street.... •11"""1,..,...' Rev: SAX% G. Rutlaus, PaStor, will preach Gernith el. - 100 M cry-Sunday morning at 10, o'clock , and English in Rvenhw at o • OlitCll • rir azlrat .Presbyterinn Church, coni '3l hanton"o and lhird Streets.. Rev. Pc tor; Services, Sunday .1034 A. M. and . eG tare, Thtirsday:evening at 2P. M. • Prayer Nlepur. • l i 9 N l pewter before 10, Sunday morniny. Sunday cox ! SP.' M. Monthly public mecting I d Sunday of mouth. se 'ha . . • ttr - tAd Prcistryterinn Church. Market gyesri,' m'l4, S. Prxtuti.,l . o. I).. Pastor.,. Seriisca !total ODOM inornings at MIX o'clock t ( Evenintrii, at T.K. Wrol, sitL i g Lecture and Prayer 'Meeting. Friday .asiings o'clock. , Pastor's residence.,-Maleintougo St wrq, 6th or Comiland street... • : • . .'../r . x•^' German iterornied Church, 11.1-kst Street;.Rev• - .T. C - .. - 11nents. Pastor. Regular' ',mire& • alternately, in theGerritan and English -languiro, sT. cry Sabbath day, at to A..M. & i F.' M. Prayer Yen. ins and Lecture every Wednesday evening at • I p• X •„ Gerroarrinitbemorning.and Engpih in the everati - • 'February 4th and IStb.. • : .• Engllsh in the morning' and German in the. evenitt. • tail February 11th and firth, ' • Alt ar.riage Notices *list be acccnny a cotta to azi . pe•ax,ils the JOUCINAL.. VOICH 111-IBRIED. . - -- • ne# • it'D:6ls:-BROWN—On - the 12-th io-t., by Mir. J. B ' -.., . litenl fough. 'Mr...IV 31. 11 ADAIIVI Of NelV . lTillii;, N. y:; •• • - to:Nfloa ELiZAUML.• Efkowsr of thie - Dopugh. .• 1 . - 2 .- Ta • PEGELY—SHADE,-On tlie;LSth. In.t.- by Ttes', 5, Trak) P. Iteinoehl. Afr. Jolla Pzitect to Mrs. Jui ri a t ;tit the, _i• all of Tremont.Sebnylklll.Co.: • Pa. • . •• tenni GEFIRER--SUTER3fEISTER—On the ~ *2,11t..1;. *1 4I Rev. M;Sehirapf, .folisr f:aittista •to MN. , MA ER I, E1.1j,. aunt SuirunoctaTirt,hoth of Pottttvil le. .. • • JOElNS—StELTZEft—At.'Ntorrigron, Fealruary 2114, - - by, , tlie Rev. G. P.. Krotel,D. I) ..Paqfor or •.•:‘ Ntuk.l !.ne,k? Litt heran Church. Philadelphia:Mr:W(l.7.l.k% U, iivt, & l i l t! fOrrnerlyof Schuylkill County, Pa.,'to, Mi., li..vrit. S. . ... Srvizra, of•Norristown.•'. •. • • ; ' 01,414 . . . , moyEitr-sp.k.lN—lm Peteruhurg, Va., D , c,' 274 . ' • - '065, by the Rev. J; G. Gitivon.l3 1).:. fittt.itr. W Niro.' .. is ke.. M 'Pottsville, Pa., to tales; ANN . I.E L brAia.bt P. NOBLE-FREED—On the 2g.d filet:, by Itrr Wm.dell • g. 31c . Ctitnba. Mr. EDWARD.NORLIN Jr., pp '11.126 PIILLi C. ,F4EED.•both.of . Port Carbon.. 'BUM • . • • .IrSesoutilianou papers please copy. t he v - 6SMAN-44EAVN.ER--On February 131. h. le' I , - 7. Schuylkill Frfrz, - Mg..Jous o.s Uf • of l~.ttsviile to hint . . .11EATNICIC of Schu;liql . . • , SELTZER.- . . , KMILER--,On the 22d bud:. by Roy 3t, .Schimpf,. At.itrirr N, Simi/Jut, to Miss Rum tR. Koltun. 7.7 r toth.ot Pottsville. • . ••• ' tog TomiciNsoN—niTTLE.,-In Minersviiie, on the 6th:. Ai n of 'January lasi, by the Rev. Joseph 'ltspril, Pryka - Y.: TQAtik - LINSON, of MinCrSVilie, to . SALLIK BiTive. of trrs-'2% , . . . . . - • . It . • IiBRIGIII— , -LA NGL6TT--A,t Onsfrabtir..lo:h « tl wk . .; .)Ir.. 1.../.ootr.ar littrG UT of North Manhelm Tp.. t, Vl, , Alls. :gads LANci.o . s - r or Oi.trigsborg, Fa:, :' t. .- . .' EtiSSE. , ..—ELNE--„At the Afethixifst Parsonage 6 . •'' Ashlgind, Feb. Irof , ISCei. by R:r. B. F. Stevens,-WN .S..firsse.•j,. an.? Ali G . El,lKii KLINE, both of Ashland, Pi.'brat DIED. - atm .• Simple aiinoltneements-Of :deaths. free.' Thc,e ef• e nnpattied with - notices, .i.e.,ntust be paid fur alai niq cafe of 10 coil's per . lint.. • , ". BOYD_=lir Tamaqua, on the 16th inat , of catarrh fever, CliAmas F. bitoksint, on of G. L.. unit Lola p,yd... - agcd yearv, E' onths and -9 data. • . ' .G11...17F[N",.÷.0n the loth jnst., Jn Tram'', Township, = ELT.L.N..daugliter otJames and Elizabeth Grath]. seed MI K lll-, 6 ymarti,.9 months - end 12 days. -: GRAEE,F—On Moriday evening Orai:sbare, - Mattriaskr,,widow 'of -.the late Michael Gruff, a:lid al. -I.LtIVIAN-On.the 15th lndt., In t`ottevillt, Dr. FLA . , RIAN ILLNIAN, a native of Germany, aged ad years. _ Ktra4—YebrnarT 6 .th; in Miner:wine.' .aiarw, wife of Fiderick - Kurtz, aged 3'7...year5...a: mozahi end' . JC 12 day.;.... • - .flab KETIVER—Peb... 12th, in „West. Brunswick, JLnyy_44 wire,ol Benjantin-Ketner, aged 51 years,. mental an • o' i r • TtOBERTS-:-On: Sunday.`-Bith inst., in Malantg 'du,: a City, It - H . .1.1am lintwars; agedl.9 years... 'The tiereiAct 747 Was, a member, of. the Song of Temperance. 'and au beried.by the members oft Order in the Borbagaut' • '7 R.BEB—On'the let Anat., In Pinegrove Townaktp, 41' SAAILLA Ilaan. a horn Umbenhauer. aged is years,” - months and 11 lava. . •tttl . • .. ..-. • ' • Obit Hair. . .kr a special meeting of Loyal Division. No.. IL 5 .rai - 1 ,.....,• - • Of Temperance of Mithainiy, City, Pa., held on Februen - . !!'-'." . - i sth, '1%5,, the following:preamble and resolution Aka -Were adopted, viz: •- • - - - ' • . • : . ,' .......,'• , Sfinzar.es,. It has pleased 'Almighty God to Male'', agil!:l •from our midst our late brother, V. - mums F. ltosnor WI. therefore be. it lirsol.vm,.. That we bow" with submission tons: d. CO* cree Of the All-wise Cteato.r,in thus taking to bites , ' -...-„:, the gift bestowed upon the. relatives and friends rgYz: ^".lf deceased brother, .feeling assured thst hi. ennl bar : b:h,r,A - gone. to the place where "peace and happiness shall th e , , reign forever." - . -- -, . • • • .' • - l. Le. : . kiss.or.vuo. That In the death of brother .11Mirare be ...Sons of Temperance have lost a'raluable member. sad • dne - who had he ' been permitted ',to remain among a'. . „., wriuldhave been a •.•shining liht" in our great CCIAt..; abl e whole brightness Wonld haveshed abroad the hies:tap i'ii i of Temperance. • ' - - - '— - - . RE201..VE.1 , , That in Miten of our respect and eritern ,n n A forcer demised brother. we will shroud our room sic, . 4 7.47 the usual-badge of mourning for thirty dare. • . - tug - Riami.rin,• That a cop 3 of these resolutions be hind. •-: .. :7 .. ed to the parents of late brother, and publishella "AO Mah.fooy. City Gazette and Miners' .Toittnal. . ...._. ' • • .• . IVANIIOE S.. 111Mi.y...1 • ' land .. • . ' ,- A.. E. Pamirs, .. ' .:ConIlloiltre: 'Wet . . . NOTICE.—Those who mourn over the il#l. 01 I f r departed Bead and 'iyish to mark. their .place of, rev. , with nsuitablememento, are. hereby reimectfulir formed that an'exterai-Ye Marble establishment will's: . thai opened in Pottsville. (coming April) N'orwegtan betixeen Ceel afid Ruil:oad St.. where a choice iissab • merit of Marble Work will he fir selection. Ala" Granite and Brown Stone work.done. • " '4;l, Purtifer•notice in due time. • • • • EAGLE MARBLE WO . TIKS.- • • .. 'GEN 8 RAI, YU'J'ICES.• NOTICE TO 01P. 1311 - TOll4.—Notieee is hereby glieer that keel • patent rimed the Inth of May. Igsa. have.been.iesheaf the United Spites to Richard B. Douty for Improved:Pt On Coal Screens,.and that the , patentee. iit:prepareP sell colliery and breaker rights to anch as desire tone his Sereeni. All persons infringing the said patent ir2 be duly', rosecnterl. For rightsMiDlY "- • : •RicHARD B Shamokin, ' .or to FRANKLIN B. GOWEN. • Oft Rib Attorney, Fortsvilit. TILIEITIONT =COAL (rOMIP.% :1 •417 c Philtadelphint V.iehonsee 4 1,1 Piiii,Anni.enrk.. - February It. - IS66.—At the Anent ~•!" Meeting of the: Stockholders. 'of this Company. !eV MI this day, the following gentleman 'were unaninmal',„• elected to seise: the ensuing 'year - . • Rer.Sriperst.--OF:ORGE SANDERSON. • • • Edgar . Thomson. 'Matthew - •th . N. Thos. J.. Woolf, Coffin Colket,- Charles. E. Lex, lb a! ,e. W. Byers. 'Feb 17. GEO. H. COLKET. Seal Fehrnary Fe 11.17, EGG a".- -- U. M. 'COLLECTOR'S •In virtue :of a warrant, directed to. tr.r..h! "J! Janice A Inness.' Collector of the Tenth -t•ollectict the' District of Pennsylvania: I will exp•,se to Publit 'at the Lewis Colliery i .lo the .ToWnship Ne,r . ttett.t-' . JVD. County of 'Ecltnylkiil, 'at 10. otlocit. in the loivr.oot , •• ' 2 . Sett:AST of.Febrisary, - 18416. • ' ital. the following articles to wit i=A lease from the lAA moth Vein 'Coal Company to-the Pottsville Voir; „. Manufacturing „Company.'e , ti mine coal at the Ice , Colliery. having about eighteen years to run. Al"° Frame Engine - House and . contents. consistia,ta t r sixty horse power Hoisting Engine. with- Itoietins: -Foetus Complete ; also three Boilers and connectioti: 114 also -4,Breaker and fixtures. consisting of 0.. e time -power Engine '.and" • gearing, Screens. C.* Schutes, 'Alai) one rame Blacksmith Shop. 1-1 • Tools and a lot of Scrap' Iron. .kiso S' Frama !•11-" . one Bay Hot - se (named Rock), one Bay, Mare Cane Betsy), ,one site -Mole (iron gray) :1 one.hottte • Trat - Wagon. one sett - Harness. ilt,isto feet. more.or Srmared Timber for -Breaker , use, -1.040 feet. '4. • Vr ire litipe, three Wheelbarrows. three Shovels, :•• Bafety,,Lampa, one keg ..alts le Slope Car- 4 ..r.itf , ,. Cars and about feet 14-inch Leather Belting. - . Seized and,taken lo execution as the pr.,perty 0! Pottsville Slitting and Manufacturing .Company, t . r'; will he sold by mt. JNO. M. MILLER. Deputy tvt pad .Collector•s OOlce. Pottaitillei Feb 1.0, : *0 SOTIC E.—WALTER. F. 'AUSTIN 1.. 0 tgfy this day been, admitted as a partner ID 5 .1 business. . • The name Of the firm hereafter will be b. PottsvWe ,fan. •titL _ ,HEBER 8.. SMITiI. . • . . .8.. &-0.)... • 1 Plumbers; Gnu Finors de Dealers in APO Pri Atiannens and Plumbing' fillaterials! AU work warranted and venni! rix attended to. IhE OFFlCE—Mabanton;lo . • St., opposite Union at- Pottsville. Pfi. : - SLI N. O.—Memel. price paid foi Old Copper,Bram sod Lead. ' , ' Feb. :r. , 44—',9t be OTTBIOLLLIR COAL .1(AIRO. ra j • • ji.uiiLlitill.Ell l .. PraPrietor. PRICE' tis.io7 - COAL PER TON , • • BROKEN COAL;'atibeiyarcl. $4 150:--liglivip":1 , -1 PF E G G 4 . . I ~ -3 STOVE .. ; . " • • 6 55 enEsvivi•••.." , : - : 8.00 '4 PEA ..900 7 . .„' J. C. HCILLEirOB• July!. '.
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